˜yÐÄvlog

Advertisement

Advertisement

View synonyms for

on tenterhooks

  1. To be kept on tenterhooks is to be held in a state of nervous apprehension: “We've been on tenterhooks since the election results started coming in.”


Discover More

Notes

A tenterhook was a hooked device used in the 1700s to secure newly woven cloth onto a frame.
Discover More

Idioms and Phrases

In a state of painful suspense, as in We were on tenterhooks all through the game, hoping against hope that our team would win . This expression alludes to hooks that formerly were used to hold newly woven cloth that was being stretched on a frame. Their name has long survived this method of manufacture. [Mid-1700s]
Discover More

Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

South Korea remains on tenterhooks for another upcoming decision by the same court - on the impeachment of President Yoon.

From

"We were on tenterhooks really, just watching the door for what seemed like forever."

From

He knows he’s already gotten one of the spots, but Ruthie is still on tenterhooks.

From

Minutes later, reports broke that he was joining Spurs and it shows how Tel has left English football on tenterhooks.

From

The country was on tenterhooks at the time, as South Africa was nearing the end of apartheid, the racist system of white-minority rule.

From

Advertisement

Discover More

More About On Tenterhooks

What doesÌýon tenterhooks mean?

On tenterhooks means in a state of painfully anxious suspense or tension. Being on tenterhooks typically involves being extremely nervous while awaiting the outcome of a tense situation, such as a close election, an exciting sports game, or a horror movie.

What are tenterhooks, anyway?

Tenterhooks are hooks used to attach cloth to a tenter—a frame on which cloth is stretched during the manufacturing process so that it can keep its shape while drying. Tenterhooks are no longer widely used in cloth manufacturing, and the word tenterhooks is now almost exclusively used in the phrase on tenterhooks.

Example: I’ve been on tenterhooks all morning waiting for the doctor’s office to call back with my test results.

Where does the phraseÌýon tenterhooks come from?

The first records of the phrase on tenterhooks come from the mid-1700s. The word tenterhook is first recorded in the late 1400s. Tenter comes from the Middle English tente, which means “to stretch” and derives from the Latin ³Ùŧ²Ô²õ³Ü²õ, meaning “tense.” The word tenter was formerly used as a synonym for tenterhook, and the expression on tenters was first used before on tenterhooks to mean the same thing.

Most of the people who use the phrase on tenterhooks have probably never seen actual tenterhooks, and most may not even know what they are. But it’s a good metaphor—when someone is described as being on tenterhooks, they feel tense and stretched thin, just like the fabric on a tenter. This often involves apprehension about a negative situation, but someone can be on tenterhooks from nervous excitement about something potentially positive as well. ​

Did you know ... ?

What are some synonyms for on tenterhooks?

What are some words that share a root or word element with on tenterhooks?Ìý

Ìý

What are some words that often get used in discussing on tenterhooks?

How isÌýon tenterhooks used in real life?

The phrase on tenterhooks is often applied to negative situations, but it can be used to describe someone who’s nervously excited.

Ìý

Ìý

Ìý

Try usingÌýon tenterhooks!

Which of the following terms is a synonym of the phrase on tenterhooks?

A. on edge
B. tense
C. anxious
D. all of the above

Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement