to be driving at

Dictionary of American Words And Phrases by John Russell Bartlett.

'What are you driving at?' that is, what are you about? what object have you in view? A colloquial expression, in very common use.


We confess that we are exceedingly puzzled to know exactly what our long-cherished friend is driving at, in his repeated discussions of the question above involved.--N. Y. Com. Advertiser.

People ludicrate my situation, and say they don't know what the deuce I'm driving at.--Neal's Charcoal Sketches.

I have heard enough now, said the Recorder, to know what you and he would be driving at.--Pickings from the Picayune, p. 135.

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