Idioms for wear

    wear thin,
    1. to diminish; weaken: My patience is wearing thin.
    2. to become less appealing, interesting, tolerable, etc.: childish antics that soon wore thin.

Origin of wear

before 900; (v.) Middle English weren to have (clothes) on the body, waste, damage, suffer waste or damage, Old English werian; cognate with Old Norse verja, Gothic wasjan to clothe; (noun) late Middle English were act of carrying on the body, derivative of the v.; akin to Latin vestis clothing (see vest)

OTHER WORDS FROM wear

wear·er, noun re·wear, verb, re·wore, re·worn, re·wear·ing.

British Dictionary definitions for wear thin (1 of 3)

Wear
/ (wɪə) /

noun

a river in NE England, rising in NW Durham and flowing southeast then northeast to the North Sea at Sunderland. Length: 105 km (65 miles)

British Dictionary definitions for wear thin (2 of 3)

wear 1
/ (wɛə) /

verb wears, wearing, wore or worn

noun

Derived forms of wear

wearer, noun

Word Origin for wear

Old English werian; related to Old High German werien, Old Norse verja, Gothic vasjan

British Dictionary definitions for wear thin (3 of 3)

wear 2
/ (wɛə) /

verb wears, wearing, wore or worn

nautical to tack by gybing instead of by going through stays

Word Origin for wear

C17: from earlier weare, of unknown origin

Idioms and Phrases with wear thin (1 of 2)

wear thin

1

Be weakened or diminished gradually, as in My patience is wearing thin. [Late 1800s]

2

Become less convincing, acceptable, or popular, as in His excuses are wearing thin. [First half of 1990s] Both usages transfer the thinning of a physical object, such as cloth, to nonmaterial characteristics.

Idioms and Phrases with wear thin (2 of 2)

wear