Hello everyone. I am reading a novel, and I came across this expression. Could you please let me know its meaning?
I went back to 105th Street to go over last night’s footsteps. I didn’t know why I was doing it, just as I didn’t know why I trundled down the same area so many times last night. But last night everything seemed shrouded in a spectral fog behind which I took cover, the better not to see the void looming before me. Last night I knew I was a shattered being. Today, I didn’t feel shattered at all. Things must be getting better, I thought, I must be healing and already getting over the hardest part. How fickle the human heart. I was almost about to take myself to task for being so frivolous when I suddenly caught sight of her window. I was jolted by an overwhelming sense of panic. It told me that the wound I thought was already healing hadn’t even been thoroughly inflicted yet, which was why it didn’t hurt so much. The knife wasn’t all the way in yet, things hadn’t started getting worse.
- André Aciman, Eight White Nights, Seventh Night
This is a novel published in the United States of America in 2010. This novel is narrated by the nameless male protagonist who meets Clara at a Christmas party in Manhattan. The protagonist, after walking Clara home, is walking around her neighborhood, thinking.
In this part, I wonder what the underlined expression means.
I am confused as to whether "task" here is a noun or a verb... And I just have no idea what it means to "take oneself to task, for being so frivolous", so I wanted to ask you. o_O
Thank you very much for your help.
"To take someone to task (for/over something )" is a fixed expression. q=task_1 ). Cambridge is good for expressions.
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"To take someone to task (for/over something)" is a fixed expression. It means "to criticize or speak angrily to someone for something that they have done wrong" ( https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/task?q=task_1 ). Cambridge is good for expressions.
Curious ReaderI am confused as to whether "task" here is a noun or a verb..
It is an idiom, so hard to classify. I assume a noun.
There are many similar idioms: