break someone of something



break someone of something

Cause to discontinue a habit or practice, as in Mom tried for years to break Betty of biting her nails. The Oxford English Dictionary cites a quotation from W. Wotton's History of Rome (1701): "He ... broke them of their warm Baths," which presumably refers to breaking Romans of their custom of bathing regularly. Today we are more apt to break someone of a bad habit. [Early 1600s]
See also: break, of

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Mijo-Croatian, Serbian
Gweneth-Welsh
Mikheil-Georgian
Udo (2)-Western African, Igbo
ClaudeKLOD (French), KLAWD (English)French, English
Bulus-Arabic