bite
[ bahyt ]
/ baɪt /
verb (used with object), bit, bit·ten or bit, bit·ing.
verb (used without object), bit, bit·ten or bit, bit·ing.
noun
Idioms for bite
Origin of bite
before 1000; Middle English
biten, Old English
bītan; cognate with Old High German
bīzan (German
beissen), Gothic
beitan, Old Norse
bīta; akin to Latin
findere to split
OTHER WORDS FROM bite
bit·a·ble, bite·a·ble, adjectiveWords nearby bite
British Dictionary definitions for bite someone's head off
bite
/ (baɪt) /
verb bites, biting, bit or bitten
noun
Derived forms of bite
biter, nounWord Origin for bite
Old English
bītan; related to Latin
findere to split, Sanskrit
bhedati he splits
Medical definitions for bite someone's head off
bite
[ bīt ]
v.
To cut, grip, or tear with the teeth.
To pierce the skin of with the teeth, fangs, or mouthparts.
n.
The act of biting.
A puncture or laceration of the skin by the teeth of an animal or the mouthparts of an insect or similar organism.
Idioms and Phrases with bite someone's head off (1 of 2)
bite someone's head off
Also, snap someone's head off. Scold or speak very angrily to someone, as in Ask her to step down from the board? She'd bite my head off! The first expression, dating from the mid-1900s, replaced the much earlier bite someone's nose off (16th century); the variant was first recorded in 1886.
Idioms and Phrases with bite someone's head off (2 of 2)
bite