To Needle Someone


🗓️ Idiom: To Needle Someone (verb)


💬 Meaning

  • To deliberately annoy or tease someone, often in a playful way.
  • To make small, repeated comments that irritate someone.

🧠 Example Sentences

  • Jake likes to needle his coworkers about being late for meetings.
  • She was needling her friend all morning about his new hairstyle.
  • Don’t needle him about the report, he’s already stressed enough.

🏛️ Origin

The idiom comes from the action of a needle poking something — small, sharp, and irritating. It began being used in English in the early 1900s to describe teasing or provoking someone with words.


📝 Practice Exercises

1. Fill in the blank:
Mark kept ________ his teammate about the mistake in the report.

Answer

needling

2. Choose the correct answer:
If you “needle someone,” you:
a) Encourage them kindly
b) Tease or annoy them repeatedly
c) Help them stay calm

Answer

b) Tease or annoy them repeatedly

3. Change the sentence using “needle someone”:
“He kept teasing her about being too serious at work.”

Answer

He kept needling her about being too serious at work.


ℹ️ Other Useful Pages


📚 Learning Resources

👉 Idioms for Humour in the Workplace
👉 Business English Idioms List

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👉 Tutor Toolkit

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