up to eleven
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From a scene in the mockumentary This is Spinal Tap (1984), in which a musician shows off a guitar amplifier with setting knobs that go from zero to eleven, rather than the standard zero to ten.
Pronunciation
Audio (AU): (file)
Adverb
- (idiomatic) Beyond the maximum possible threshold
- 1997, Matthew Branton, The Love Parade, Hamish Hamilton (1997), →ISBN, page 60:
- She and River looked at me hard; but I lowered my eyes and leaned forward, with the nonchalance turned up to eleven, extinguished my cigarette, made eye-contact and nodded curtly.
- 2008, Tim Pratt, Poison Sleep, Bantam Spectra (2008), →ISBN, page 267:
- Flying is like motion sickness turned up to eleven, […]
- 2009, Robin Jones Gunn, Sisterchicks Go Brit!, Random House Books (2008), →ISBN, 147.
- “(...) ‘Oh, Lady Ebb, I'm up to eleven today after that last biscuit.’ (...)”
- 2013, Mark Mason, Move Along, Please, Random House Books (2013), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
- As we reach the city today, rush hour has been turned up to eleven, so there's plenty of waiting in traffic.
- 2014, Joseph O'Connor, The Thrill of it All, Random House Books (2014), →ISBN, unmarked page.
- It's not that London was unexciting. But I didn't understand it, felt lost. Its amp went up to eleven.
- 2015, Charles Baxter, There's Something I Want You to Do: Stories, Random House Books (2015), →ISBN, unnumbered page.
- “But what our textbook said? Was that they had, you know, torture parties there. Once. Where torturers get drunk and turn the dial up to eleven.”
- 1997, Matthew Branton, The Love Parade, Hamish Hamilton (1997), →ISBN, page 60:
Verb
up to eleven (third-person singular simple present ups to eleven, present participle upping to eleven, simple past and past participle upped to eleven)
- (slang, transitive) to increase to an extreme degree, to make (something) go over the top