raise someone's shackles
English
editVerb
editraise someone's shackles (third-person singular simple present raises someone's shackles, present participle raising someone's shackles, simple past and past participle raised someone's shackles)
- Misconstruction of raise someone's hackles
- 2001 02, Geri Crowder, The Cat's-Eye, iUniverse, →ISBN, page 138:
- His remark about her hair had raised her shackles. "You didn't object to spending an occasional night in a comfortable bed so don't try to shift the dwindling cash onto my whims. What's put you in such a bad mood?"
- 2011 August 1, Latika Mangrulkar, Life Happens, and Death Too: Stories and Poems, Strategic Book Publishing, →ISBN, page 73:
- Anything that even smelled of tradition or orthodoxy aroused absolute skepticism in him; actually, it raised his shackles instantly. Ashok had learned to hide the intensity of these feelings under a kindly and caring demeanor.
- 2014 September 22, Kristy McCaffrey, The Dove: Historical Western Romance, K. McCaffrey LLC, →ISBN:
- and rarely did it raise his shackles, but he didn't particularly care for Red's touch, as flattering as he supposed it was. But this wasn't flattery, Red was working.
- 2015 February 25, Jill Martin Bouteillier, Return to Sable, AuthorHouse, →ISBN:
- He would be expecting news, but she was wary of sharing the past Christmas celebration for fear it would raise his shackles.
- 2016 October 1, Rowena Candlish, Worth the Wait (A Novella), Rowena Candlish, →ISBN:
- But that one statement alone raised his shackles. “Why?”
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see raise, shackle.