Bite

来自Big Physics

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Old English bītan, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch bijten and German beissen .


Ety img bite.png

wiktionary

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From Middle English biten, from Old English bītan(“to bite”), from Proto-West Germanic *bītan, from Proto-Germanic *bītaną(“to bite”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰeyd-(“to split”). Cognates include Saterland Frisian biete(“to bite”), West Frisian bite(“to bite”), Dutch bijten(“to bite”), German Low German bieten(“to bite”), German beißen(“to bite”), Danish bide(“to bite”), Swedish bita(“to bite”), Norwegian Bokmål bite(“to bite”), Norwegian Nynorsk bita(“to bite”), Icelandic bíta(“to bite”), Gothic 𐌱𐌴𐌹𐍄𐌰𐌽( beitan, “to bite”), Latin findō(“split”, verb), Ancient Greek φείδομαι(pheídomai), Sanskrit भिद्(bhid, “to break”).


etymonline

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bite (v.)

Old English bitan "to pierce or cut with the teeth" (class I strong verb; past tense bat, past participle biten), from Proto-Germanic *beitanan (source also of Old Saxon bitan, Old Norse and Old Frisian bita "cut, pierce, penetrate," Middle Dutch biten, Dutch bijten, German beissen, Gothic beitan "to bite"), from PIE root *bheid- "to split," with derivatives in Germanic referring to biting.

To bite the bullet is said to be 1700s military slang, from old medical custom of having the patient bite a lead bullet during an operation to divert attention from pain and reduce screaming. Figurative use from 1891; the custom itself attested from 1840s. To bite (one's) tongue "refrain from speaking" is 1590s; to bite (one's) lip to repress signs of some emotion or reaction is from early 14c. To bite off more than one can chew (c. 1880) is U.S. slang, from plug tobacco.

To bite the dust "be thrown or struck down," hence "be vanquished, die, be slain, perish in battle" is from 1750, earlier bite the ground (1670s), lick the dust (late 14c.), which OED identifies as "a Hebraism," but Latin had the same image; compare Virgil's procubuit moriens et humum semel ore momordit.




bite (n.)

late Old English bite, "a biting, an act of piercing with the teeth;" c. 1200, "a mouthful, a morsel of food," from Proto-Germanic bitiz (source also of Old Frisian biti "a bite, a cut, penetration of a weapon," Old Norse bit "a bite," Old Saxon biti, Middle Dutch bete "a bite, bit), from the source of bite (v.). From early 15c. as "a mark left by biting." From 1865 as "the catch or hold of one mechanical part on another."