Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

    • Very upset or angry about something

      • up in arms Very upset or angry about something. Likened to an armed rebellion, from which the phrase originated. The whole town is up in arms about the addition of a new shopping center. Mom was really up in arms after I dented her brand-new car.
      idioms.thefreedictionary.com/up in arms
  1. People also ask

  2. Meaning of be up in arms in English. be up in arms. idiom informal. Add to word list. to be very angry: They're up in arms about the new management structure. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Angry and displeased. acridly. acrimoniously. aggrieved. amused. fed up to the back teeth idiom. fired up. fit to be tied idiom. fractiously.

  3. UP IN ARMS definition: angry or upset: . Learn more.

  4. up in arms. COMMON If someone is up in arms about something, they are very angry about it and are protesting strongly. More than one million shopkeepers are up in arms against the new minimum tax. This is a very delicate situation.

  5. What's the meaning of the phrase 'Up in arms'? Roused; incensed. What's the origin of the phrase 'Up in arms'? The original usage of ‘up in arms’ was entirely literal. To be ‘in arms’ or ‘at arms’ was to be equipped with weapons and armour. The first known use of ‘up in arms’ in print is in Arthur Golding’s translation of Lyfe of Shatilion, 1576:

  6. Angry, rebellious, as in The town was up in arms over the state's plan to allow commercial flights at the air base . This idiom originally referred to an armed rebellion and was so used from the late 1500s. Its figurative use dates from about 1700.

  7. UP IN ARMS meaning: angry or upset: . Learn more.

  8. phrase. If people are up in arms about something, they are very angry about it and are protesting strongly against it. Environmental groups are up in arms about plans for fracking in the area. See full dictionary entry for arm.

  1. People also search for