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Definition 2024
at_one's_wit's_end
wits' end
See also: wit's end
English
Alternative forms
- wit's end (US)
Noun
wits' end (plural wits' ends)
- (chiefly Britain) Limit of one's sanity or mental capacity; point of desperation.
- 1699, Edward Taylor, in The Poems of Edward Taylor (1989 edition), page 136:
- The Seamen they
- Bestir their stumps, and at wits end do weep.
- Wake, Jonas, who saith
- Heave me over deck.
- 1868, Wilkie Collins, The Moonstone, ch. 22:
- He was so eloquent in drawing the picture of his own neglected merits, and so pathetic in lamenting over it when it was done, that I felt quite at my wits' end how to console him.
- 1906, Upton Sinclair, The Jungle, Chapter 18
- The frightened women were at their wits' end.
- c. 1911, John Muir, in John Muir and Michael P. Branch, John Muir's Last Journey: South to the Amazon and East to Africa (2002 edition), page 138:
- Our dozen cabin passengers sorely put to wits' end to pass yesterday without cards in observance of the Sabbath.
- 2010 Dec. 10, Leo Cendrowicz, "Talks on Iran's Nuclear Program Produce ... More Talks," Time:
- Yet years of talks, threats and sanctions have failed to halt the program, and officials are at their wits' end on how to wean Iran off its nuclear habit.
- 1699, Edward Taylor, in The Poems of Edward Taylor (1989 edition), page 136:
Translations
at (one's) wits' end — see perplexed
Usage notes
- The form wits' end is preferred nearly 3 to 1 in the UK (BNC).
- The form wit's end is preferred more than 2 to 1 in the US (COCA).