释义 |
raring to go raring to goVery eager, excited, or anxious to go somewhere or begin doing something. The kids were already in the car and raring to go. After the rousing speech by the boss, the whole team was raring to go.See also: go, raringrarin' to goextremely keen to act or do something. Jane can't wait to start her job. She's rarin' to go. Mary is rarin' to go and can't wait for her university term to start.See also: goraring to goVery eager to begin, as in The children were all dressed and raring to go. This idiom uses raring for rearing, and alludes to a horse's standing on its hind legs when it is anxious to get moving. [Early 1900s] See also: go, raringraring to go COMMON If you are raring to go, you are very eager to go somewhere or to start doing something. After a good night's sleep, Paul said he was raring to go. `Where is it?' I asked, suddenly raring to go.See also: go, raringraring to go very keen and eager to make a start. informal Historically, raring is the present participle of rare , an obsolete dialectal variant of the verb rear .See also: go, raringˌraring to ˈgo (informal) very enthusiastic about starting something: We’ve finished our training and now we’re all raring to go.See also: go, raringraring to go mod. anxious and eager to go. Come on, I’m raring to go! See also: go, raringraring to goExtremely eager to get started. This American locution of the late nineteenth century uses raring for rearing, the verb still used for what a lively horse does when it stands on its hind legs and is clearly eager to get moving. A colloquialism of the twentieth century, it appeared in F. N. Hart’s The Bellamy Trial (1927): “Both sides are rarin’ to go.”See also: go, raring |