Also,
break one's neck. Make a great effort, work very hard. For example,
I've been breaking my back over this problem for the past week, or
Don't break your neck to get there; we'll wait for you. Both versions of this expression, polite equivalents of
break one's ass, transfer the literal fracture of one's back or neck to figurative exertion. However,
break one's neck has the secondary connotation of proceeding with reckless speed, a sense also conveyed by the term
breakneck pace. Originally this idiom alluded to literally breaking one's neck by rushing heedlessly along, but it has been used figuratively for the past 300 years. Also see
break the back of.