raise someone's hackles

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English[edit]

Pronunciation[edit]

  • (file)

Verb[edit]

raise someone's hackles (third-person singular simple present raises someone's hackles, present participle raising someone's hackles, simple past and past participle raised someone's hackles)

  1. (idiomatic) To annoy or anger someone.
    Synonyms: see Thesaurus:annoy, Thesaurus:enrage
    Every time I hear him talk, he just raises my hackles.
    • 1976, Richard Dawkins, The Selfish Gene, Kindle edition, OUP Oxford, published 2016, page 429:
      Much as I admire Wilson’s tour de force—I wish people would read it more and read about it less—my hackles have always risen at the entirely false suggestion that his book influenced mine.
    • 2019 October 23, David Yaffe-Bellany, “Quantum Computing Explained (in Mere Minutes!)”, in New York Times[1]:
      Google announced its breakthrough in a paper published in the science journal Nature. And its claims have raised the hackles of researchers at competing companies who believe the Silicon Valley giant is inflating its accomplishment.
    • 2022 March 20, Jason Bailey, “‘Basic Instinct’ at 30: A Time Capsule That Can Still Offend”, in The New York Times[2], →ISSN:
      View the film now and it’s not hard to see what raised the hackles of such groups.

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