break someone's back
English
Verb
break someone's back (third-person singular simple present breaks someone's back, present participle breaking someone's back, simple past broke someone's back, past participle broken someone's back)
- (idiomatic) To exhaust a person's means or resources; to constitute more than they are reasonably able to do.
- Would it break your back to pay me a compliment once in a while?
- 2003, Jack White (lyrics and music), “Black Math”, in Elephant, performed by The White Stripes:
- My books are sitting at the top of the stack now
The longer words are really breaking my back now.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see break, back.
See also
References
- John Camden Hotten (1873) The Slang Dictionary
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