make tick
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]An allusion to the workings of a clock making it operate with a ticking noise
Verb
[edit]make tick (third-person singular simple present makes tick, present participle making tick, simple past and past participle made tick)
- (colloquial) To cause someone or something to operate the way it does.
- 2005, Cherie Priest, Four and Twenty Blackbirds, →ISBN, page 91:
- I honestly don't know the specifics that make him tick, and I wish I did.
- 2012, Kevin Seamus Hasson, The Right to Be Wrong: Ending the Culture War Over Religion in America, →ISBN:
- Most of us find ourselves caught in the middle, ducking for cover and wondering just who these people are and what could possibly make them tick.
- 2013, Betty Lussier, Intrepid Woman: Betty Lussier's Secret War, 1942-1945, →ISBN:
- I wanted to roam the world, exploring what made it tick, helping to make it tick better, and never get married.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see make, tick.