Get+excited
41get someone going — tv. to get someone excited; to get someone talking excitedly. □ I guess I really got him going on the subject of politics. □ The whole business really makes me mad. Don’t get me going …
42get off on — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms get off on : present tense I/you/we/they get off on he/she/it gets off on present participle getting off on past tense got off on past participle got off on informal to enjoy and become very excited about… …
43get butterflies (in your stomach) — have/get/feel/butterflies (in your stomach) phrase to feel very nervous or excited about something that you have to do, especially something important Do you get butterflies when you have to talk to lots of people? Thesaurus: physical sensations… …
44get the jitters — {v. phr.} To become very nervous or excited. * /I always get the jitters when I sit in an airplane that s about to take off./ …
45get the jitters — {v. phr.} To become very nervous or excited. * /I always get the jitters when I sit in an airplane that s about to take off./ …
46get\ the\ jitters — v. phr. To become very nervous or excited. I always get the jitters when I sit in an airplane that s about to take off …
47get one's knickers in a twist — vb British to become agitated, flustered or over excited. This picturesque vulgarism originated in the late 1950s with a purely sexual sense. Now widely used, it is generally heard in the negative form, exhorting someone to calm down. See also… …
48get off on — informal be excited or aroused by. → get …
49get carried away — to become so excited or involved in something that you lose control of your feelings or behaviour Let s not get carried away. The deal could still fall through …
50get one’s bowels in an uproar — tv. to become overly anxious or excited. □ Cool it! Don t get your bowels in an uproar. □ Fred’s always getting his bowels in an uproar about nothing …