Advertisement

Advertisement

pull someone's chain

  1. Make someone speak out of turn, as in Who pulled your chain?—It's none of your business . [1920s]

  2. Make someone angry, especially deliberately, as in Teenagers really know how to pull their parents' chains . [c. 1960] Both usages allude to the literal sense of chain-pulling, that is, “causing someone to do something, as though activated by a chain.”



Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement