drive to distraction

English edit

Etymology edit

From drive (to cause to become) + to + distraction (deranged state of mind; insanity).

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

drive to distraction (third-person singular simple present drives to distraction, present participle driving to distraction, simple past drove to distraction, past participle driven to distraction)

  1. (transitive, hyperbolic) To annoy (someone) so much that they cannot concentrate.
    Synonyms: drive crazy, drive round the bend, drive up the wall

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