Yes, "driving you up the wall" is a metaphor. It is an expression to convey someone's frustration or annoyance. It does not literally mean physically pushing someone up a wall but rather describes an emotional state.
The singer's voice was honey dripping from a silver spoon, soothing and sweet to the ears of the audience.
Her smile was a ray of sunshine, brightening up the room like a metaphorical sunbeam.
a metaphor is a metaphor
metaphor in Tagalog: talinghaga
Is the sentence her scrawny legs a metaphor
You up the wall
The origin of this phrase "Driving you up the wall" is British. Meaning to aggravate someone to the point of doing the impossible.
The idiom 'driving me up the wall' means that something is annoying or exasperating you. It originates from a person trying to escape something by literally climbing up the wall.
"Driving him up the wall" means causing someone to become extremely frustrated or annoyed to the point of feeling overwhelmed or agitated.
It refers to the mindless, scrabbling aversion caused in people by the presence of rats or snakes on the floor of a confined space. Now it just means to irritate and interfere with someone so much that they can't function properly.
It means that you drive them up to a wall in a vehicle. I believe you mean the idiom phrase "drive you up the wall," which means to frustrate you to the point where you feel like climbing up the wall to escape from them.
Wall Street is a physical place, which used to be where the NYSE was located. Wall Street is just a metaphor for financial markets. Hope that helps!
idk what wall but from wall NJ its 1238 miles. good luck
Metaphor
no the f**** i can't because this f****ing s*** is driving me up the wall
Metaphor
simile....because it has like in it