get on one's nerves
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
Not at all a bad chap, but rather apt to get on one's nerves after a while—and he had got on mine—horribly.
From Scottish Ghost Stories by O'Donnell, Elliott
Their slouchiness, however, will in the end get on one’s nerves quite as much as the “eternal” attention of the Japanese.
From Letters from China and Japan by Dewey, John
His gaiety does not get on one's nerves as does that of some—perhaps most—professional jokers: neither, as is too frequently the case with them, does it bore.
From A Letter Book Selected with an Introduction on the History and Art of Letter-Writing by Saintsbury, George
I don't mind France, where you can tell which is the front and which the back, but this kind of thing does get on one's nerves.
From The Secret City by Walpole, Hugh, Sir
"Really the silence does seem to get on one's nerves," put in Mr. Towne.
From The Moving Picture Girls Under the Palms Or Lost in the Wilds of Florida by Hope, Laura Lee