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English

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Prepositional phrase

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to high heaven

  1. (idiomatic) Immensely, forcefully.
    • 1921 December, anonymous author, “Shell-Shocked—And After”, in The Atlantic Monthly, volume 128, page 740:
      But I wished to high heaven that my head would quit aching.
    • 1929, Francis Lynde, Young Blood, page 148:
      The rear housing on the back tender truck was now blazing to high heaven.
    • 1955 October 28, Helge E. Nygren, “Statement of Helge E. Nygren []”, in Price-Support Program: Hearings before the Committee on Agriculture and Forestry, United States Senate, Eighty-Fourth Congress, First Session [], volume 3, published 1956, page 1182:
      If someone would have the nerve to ask for, say, 10 percent of that amount to be used for the training of this same young man to make a good farmer and citizen out of him, then they would cry to high heaven about the out-of-reason waste of money.
    • 2013 [a. 1929], Evald Tang Kristensen, translated by Stephen Badman, “Broken on the Wheel”, in John Herbert, editor, Odds and Sods: Stories Taken from the Collection of Evald Tang Kristensen, →ISBN, page 36:
      He stood in the middle of the road and began to complain to high heaven at the top of his voice.
    • 2015, Nesarío García, Hoe, Heaven, and Hell: My Boyhood in Rural New Mexico, →ISBN, page 38:
      How can I ever forget one cold night in February while the wind blew to high heaven?