Meaning
“Get on one's nerves” means to annoy, irritate, or bother someone repeatedly. It describes a situation where a person, sound, or action causes mental or emotional irritation.
Grammar and Usage
- Structure: get on + one’s nerves
 - "One’s" changes depending on the subject: my nerves, your nerves, his nerves, her nerves, their nerves.
 - Informal expression, commonly used in spoken English.
 - Typically used with continuous actions or habits that annoy.
 
Pattern:
- Subject + get on + (possessive adjective) nerves e.g., The noise gets on my nerves.
 
Common Phrases
- Really get on my nerves (strong irritation)
 - Starting to get on my nerves (gradually annoying)
 - Constantly getting on my nerves
 
Collocations
- Adverbs: really, always, constantly, absolutely
 - Subjects: noise, people, behavior, music, habits
 - Pronouns: my nerves, your nerves, his nerves, her nerves
 
Examples
- His constant humming really gets on my nerves.
 - The traffic jam this morning got on her nerves.
 - It’s starting to get on my nerves when you interrupt me all the time.
 - That buzzing sound from the fan is getting on my nerves.
 - Don’t play that song again—it gets on my nerves.
 - His arrogance really got on their nerves during the meeting.
 - She said the squeaky chair was getting on her nerves.
 - Waiting in long queues always gets on my nerves.
 
Synonyms or Related
- Annoy
 - Irritate
 - Bother
 - Bug (informal)
 - Drive someone crazy/mad
 - Aggravate
 
Antonym
- Calm down
 - Soothe
 - Comfort
 - Please
 
