Eat one's heart out

From Fresh Dictionary

Contents

English

Etymology

Disputed. Two schools of thought exist:

  1. From "This will eat your heart out.", suggesting that the recipient of the taunt will have their heart, the core of their being, eaten out with desire, bitterness, or pain.
  2. From the 16th century "to eat one's own heart" (to suffer in silence from anguish or grief), possibly from the Bible "to eat one's own flesh" (to be lazy)

References

Phrase

eat your heart out!

  1. (idiomatic{{#if:|, {{{2}}}{{#if:|, {{{3}}}{{#if:|, {{{4}}}{{#if:|, {{{5}}}{{#if:|, {{{6}}}{{#if:|, {{{7}}}{{#if:|, {{{8}}}{{#if:|, {{{9}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}) A taunt implying that the speaker has something the listener greatly desires.
    Eat your heart out, Duke! Carolina won the title!
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