English-Thai Dictionary
bite
N รอย กัด แผล ที่ ถูก กัด abrasion bruise wound roi-kad
bite
N หนึ่ง คำ อาหาร nueng-kam-ar-han
bite
VI(แมลง ต่อย กัด nip snap toi
bite
VT กัด ขบ งับ nip snap kad
bite back
PHRV กัด ตอบ กัด กลับ kad-tob
bite into
PHRV กัด งับ kad
bite into
PHRV กัดกร่อน ทำลาย eat into kad-kron
bite off
PHRV กัด ขาด งับ จน ขาด kad-kard
bite on
PHRV กัด งับ chew on kad
bite the bullet
SL ยอมรับ และ มีชีวิต อยู่ กับ สิ่ง ยุ่งยาก yom-rab-lae-me-chi-wid-yu-kab-sing-yung-yak
bite-size
ADJ เล็ก พอที่ จะ กิน ได้ lek-phor-ti-ja-kin-dai
bite-sized
ADJ เล็ก พอที่ จะ กิน ได้ lek-phor-ti-ja-kin-dai
biter
N ผู้ ที่ กัด การ หลอกลวง
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
BITE
v.t. pret.bit; pp. bit, bitten. 1. To break or crush with the teeth, as in eating; to pierce with the teeth, as a serpent; to seize with the teeth, as a dog.
2. To pinch or pain, as with cold; as a biting north wind; the frost bites.
3. To reproach with sarcasm; to treat with severity by words or writing; as, one poet praises, another bites.
4. To pierce, cut, or wound; as a biting falchion.
5. To make to smart, as acids bite the mouth.
6. To cheat; to trick.
The rogue was bit.
[Not elegant, but common. ]
7. To enter the ground and hold fast, as the bill and palm of an anchor.
8. To injure by angry contention.
If ye bite and devour one another. Galatians 5:15.
BITE
n.The seizure of any thing by the teeth of an animal, as the bite of a dog; or with the mouth, as of a fish. 1. The wound made by the teeth.
2. A morsel; as much as is taken at once by biting; a mouthful.
3. A cheat; a trick; a fraud. [A low word. ]
4. A sharper; one who cheats.
BITER
n.One who bites; that which bites; a fish apt to take bait. 1. One who cheats or defrauds.
BITERNATE
a.[L. bis and ternus, three. ] In botany, doubly ternate, as when a petiole has three ternate leaflets.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
BITE
Bite, v. t. [imp. Bit; p. p. Bitten, Bit; p. pr. & vb. n. Biting. ]Etym: [OE. biten, AS. bitan; akin to D. bijten, OS. bitan, OHG. bizan, G. beissen, Goth. beitan, Icel. bita, Sw. bita, Dan. bide, L. findere to cleave, Skr. bhid to cleave. sq. root87. Cf. Fissure. ]
1. To seize with the teeth, so that they enter or nip the thing seized; to lacerate, crush, or wound with the teeth; as, to bite an apple; to bite a crust; the dog bit a man. Such smiling rogues as these, Like rats, oft bite the holy cords atwain. Shak.
2. To puncture, abrade, or sting with an organ (of some insects ) used in taking food.
3. To cause sharp pain, or smarting, to; to hurt or injure, in a literal or a figurative sense; as, pepper bites the mouth. "Frosts do bite the meads. " Shak.
4. To cheat; to trick; to take in. [Colloq. ] Pope.
5. To take hold of; to hold fast; to adhere to; as, the anchor bites the ground. The last screw of the rack having been turned so often that its purchase crumbled, ... it turned and turned with nothing to bite. Dickens. To bite the dust, To bite the ground, to fall in the agonies of death; as, he made his enemy bite the dust. -- To bite in (Etching ), to corrode or eat into metallic plates by means of an acid. -- To bite the thumb at (any one ), formerly a mark of contempt, designed to provoke a quarrel; to defy. "Do you bite your thumb at us " Shak. -- To bite the tongue, to keep silence. Shak.
BITE
BITE Bite, v. i.
1. To seize something forcibly with the teeth; to wound with the teeth; to have the habit of so doing; as, does the dog bite
2. To cause a smarting sensation; to have a property which causes such a sensation; to be pungent; as, it bites like pepper or mustard.
3. To cause sharp pain; to produce anguish; to hurt or injure; to have the property of so doing. At the last it [wine ] biteth like serpent, and stingeth like an adder. Prov. xxiii. 32.
4. To take a bait into the mouth, as a fish does; hence, to take a tempting offer.
5. To take or keep a firm hold; as, the anchor bites.
BITE
Bite, n. Etym: [OE. bite, bit, bitt, AS. bite bite, fr. bitan to bite, akin to Icel. bit, OS. biti, G. biss. See Bite, v., and cf. Bit. ]
1. The act of seizing with the teeth or mouth; the act of wounding or separating with the teeth or mouth; a seizure with the teeth or mouth, as of a bait; as, to give anything a hard bite. I have known a very good fisher angle diligently four or six hours for a river carp, and not have a bite. Walton.
2. The act of puncturing or abrading with an organ for taking food, as is done by some insects.
3. The wound made by biting; as, the pain of a dog's or snake's bite; the bite of a mosquito.
4. A morsel; as much as is taken at once by biting.
5. The hold which the short end of a lever has upon the thing to be lifted, or the hold which one part of a machine has upon another.
6. A cheat; a trick; a fraud. [Colloq. ] The baser methods of getting money by fraud and bite, by deceiving and overreaching. Humorist.
7. A sharper; one who cheats. [Slang ] Johnson.
8. (Print. )
Defn: A blank on the edge or corner of a page, owing to a portion of the frisket, or something else, intervening between the type and paper.
BITER
BITER Bit "er, n.
1. One who, or that which, bites; that which bites often, or is inclined to bite, as a dog or fish. "Great barkers are no biters." Camden.
2. One who cheats; a sharper. [Colloq. ] Spectator.
BITERNATE
Bi *ter "nate, a. Etym: [Pref. bi- + ternate. ] (Bot. )
Defn: Doubly ternate, as when a petiole has three ternate leaflets. -- Bi *ter "nate *ly, adv. Gray.
New American Oxford Dictionary
bite
bite |bīt baɪt | ▶verb ( past bit |bit |; past participle bitten |ˈbitn | ) [ no obj. ] 1 (of a person or animal ) use the teeth to cut into something in order to eat it: Rosa bit into a cupcake | [ with obj. ] : he bit a mouthful from the sandwich. • [ with obj. ] (of an animal or a person ) use the teeth in order to inflict injury on: she had bitten, scratched, and kicked her assailant. • [ with obj. ] (of a snake, insect, or spider ) wound with fangs, pincers, or a sting: she was bitten by an adder. • (bite at ) (of an animal ) snap at; attempt to bite: it is not unusual for this dog to bite at its owner's hand. • (of an acid ) corrode a surface: chemicals have bitten deep into the stone. • (of a fish ) take the bait or lure on the end of a fishing line into the mouth. • (of a person ) be persuaded to accept a deal or offer: a hundred or so retailers should bite. 2 (of a tool, tire, boot, etc. ) grip a surface: once on the wet grass, my boots failed to bite. • (of an object ) press into a part of the body, causing pain: the handcuffs bit into his wrists. • cause emotional pain: Cheryl's betrayal had bitten deep. • (of a policy or situation ) take effect, with unpleasant consequences: when the cuts in art education start to bite. • informal be very bad, unpleasant, or unfortunate: it bites that your mom won't let you go. ▶noun 1 an act of biting into something in order to eat it: Stephen ate a hot dog in three big bites. • a piece cut off by biting: Robyn took a large bite out of her sandwich. • informal a quick snack: I plan to stop off in the village and have a bite to eat . • a small morsel of prepared food, intended to constitute one mouthful: minced bacon bites with cheese. • a short piece of information: snack-sized bites of information. See also sound bite. • a wound inflicted by an animal's or a person's teeth: Perry's dog had given her a nasty bite. • a wound inflicted by a snake, insect, or spider: his face was covered in mosquito bites. • an act of bait being taken by a fish: by four o'clock he still hadn't had a single bite. • Dentistry the bringing together of the teeth in occlusion. • Dentistry the imprint of this in a plastic material. 2 a sharp or pungent flavor: a fresh, lemony bite. • incisiveness or cogency of style: his colorful characterizations brought added bite to the story. • a feeling of cold in the air or wind: by early October there's a bite in the air. PHRASES someone's bark is worse than their bite see bark 1. be bitten by the —— bug develop a passionate interest in a specified activity: Joe was bitten by the showbiz bug at the age of four. bite the big one informal die. bite the bullet decide to do something difficult or unpleasant that one has been putting off or hesitating over. [from the old custom of giving wounded soldiers a bullet to bite on when undergoing surgery without anesthetic. ] bite the dust informal be killed: and the bad guys bite the dust with lead in their bellies. • fail; come to an end: she hoped the new program would not bite the dust for lack of funding. bite the hand that feeds one deliberately hurt or offend a benefactor. bite someone's head off see head. bite one's lip repress an emotion; stifle laughter or a retort: he could have mocked Carol's obnoxious behavior, but he bit his lip. bite off more than one can chew take on a commitment one cannot fulfill. bite one's tongue make a desperate effort to avoid saying something: I had to bite my tongue and accept his explanation. one could have bitten one's tongue off used to show that someone profoundly and immediately regrets having said something. once bitten, twice shy proverb an unpleasant experience induces caution. put the bite on informal borrow or extort money from. [1930s: bite in the slang sense ‘cadging. ’] take a bite out of informal reduce by a significant amount: insurance costs that can take a bite out of your retirement funds. PHRASAL VERBS bite something back refrain with difficulty from saying something, making a sound, or expressing an emotion: Melissa bit back a scathing comment. DERIVATIVES bit er noun ORIGIN Old English bītan, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch bijten and German beissen .
biternate
biternate |bʌɪˈtəːneɪt | ▶adjective Botany (especially of a ternate leaf ) having leaflets or other parts that are further subdivided in a ternate arrangement.
bite-sized
bite-sized |baɪt saɪzd |(also bite-size ) ▶adjective (of a piece of food ) small enough to be eaten in one mouthful: cut the potatoes into bite-sized pieces. • informal very small or short: a series of bite-sized essays.
bitewing
bite wing |ˈbītˌwiNG ˈbaɪtwɪŋ | ▶noun a dental film for X-raying the crowns of upper and lower teeth simultaneously and that is held in place by a tab between the teeth.
Oxford Dictionary
bite
bite |bʌɪt | ▶verb ( past bit |bɪt |; past participle bitten |ˈbɪt (ə )n | ) [ with obj. ] 1 use the teeth to cut into (something ): the woman's arm was bitten off by an alligator | [ no obj. ] : Rosa bit into a cream cake. • use the teeth in order to inflict injury on: she had bitten, scratched, and kicked her assailant. • (of a snake, insect, or spider ) wound with fangs, pincers, or a sting: while on holiday she was bitten by an adder. • [ no obj. ] (of an acid ) corrode a surface: chemicals have bitten deep into the stone. • [ no obj. ] (of a fish ) take the bait or lure on the end of a fishing line into the mouth. • [ no obj. ] informal be persuaded to accept a deal or offer: a hundred or so retailers should bite. • informal annoy or worry: what's biting you today? 2 [ no obj. ] (of a tool, tyre, boot, etc. ) grip or take hold on a surface: once on the slab, my boots failed to bite. • (of an object ) press into a part of the body, causing pain: the handcuffs bit into his wrists. • cause emotional pain: Cheryl's betrayal had bitten deep . • (of a policy or situation ) take effect, with unpleasant consequences: the cuts in art education were starting to bite. • N. Amer. informal be very bad, unpleasant, or unfortunate. ▶noun 1 an act of biting something in order to eat it: Stephen ate a hot dog in three big bites. • a wound inflicted by an animal's or a person's teeth: Percy's dog had given her a nasty bite. • a wound inflicted by a snake, insect, or spider: my legs were covered in mosquito bites. • an instance of bait being taken by a fish: by four o'clock he still hadn't had a single bite. • Dentistry the bringing together of the teeth so that the jaws are closed. • Dentistry an imprint of the position of the teeth when the jaws are closed, made in a plastic material. 2 a piece cut off by biting: Robyn took a large bite out of her sandwich. • informal a quick snack: I plan to stop off in the village and have a bite to eat . • a small morsel of prepared food, intended to constitute one mouthful: bacon bites with cheese. • a short piece of information. 3 a sharp or pungent flavour: a fresh, lemony bite. • [ mass noun ] incisiveness or cogency of style: the tale has added bite if its characters appear to be real. • a feeling of cold in the air or wind: by early October there's a bite in the air. PHRASES someone's bark is worse than their bite see bark 1. be bitten by the —— bug develop a passionate interest in a specified activity: Joe was badly bitten by the showbiz bug at the age of four. bite the big one N. Amer. informal die. bite the bullet decide to do something difficult or unpleasant that one has been putting off or hesitating over. [from the old custom of giving wounded soldiers a bullet to bite on when undergoing surgery without anaesthetic. ] bite the dust informal be killed. • fail or come to an end: she hoped the new course would not bite the dust for lack of funding. bite the hand that feeds one deliberately hurt or offend a benefactor. bite someone's head off see head. bite one's lip repress an emotion; stifle laughter or repress a retort. bite one's nails chew at one's nails as a nervous habit. bite off more than one can chew take on a commitment one cannot fulfil. the biter bitten (or bit ) used to indicate that someone is being treated in the same way that they have treated others, typically badly. bite one's tongue make a desperate effort to avoid saying something: I had to bite my tongue and accept his explanation. one could have bitten one's tongue off used to convey that one profoundly and immediately regrets having said something: as soon as he had spoken, Grant could have bitten his tongue off. once bitten, twice shy proverb an unpleasant experience induces caution. put the bite on N. Amer. & Austral. /NZ informal borrow or extort money from. [1930s (originally US ): bite, from the slang sense ‘deception ’.] take a bite out of informal reduce by a significant amount: commissions that can take a bite out of your retirement funds. PHRASAL VERBS bite something back refrain with difficulty from saying something, making a sound, or expressing an emotion: Melissa bit back a scathing comment. DERIVATIVES biter noun ORIGIN Old English bītan, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch bijten and German beissen .
biternate
biternate |bʌɪˈtəːneɪt | ▶adjective Botany (especially of a ternate leaf ) having leaflets or other parts that are further subdivided in a ternate arrangement.
bite-sized
bite-sized (also bite-size ) ▶adjective (of a piece of food ) small enough to be eaten in one mouthful: cut the potatoes into bite-sized pieces. • informal very small or short: a series of bite-sized essays.
bitewing
bite wing |ˈbītˌwiNG ˈbaɪtwɪŋ | ▶noun a dental film for X-raying the crowns of upper and lower teeth simultaneously and that is held in place by a tab between the teeth.
American Oxford Thesaurus
bite
bite verb 1 the dog bit his arm: sink one's teeth into, chew, munch, crunch, chomp, tear at, snap at. 2 the acid bites into the copper: corrode, eat into, eat away at, burn (into ), etch, dissolve. 3 a hundred or so retailers should bite: accept, agree, respond; be lured, be enticed, be tempted; take the bait. ▶noun 1 he took a bite of his sandwich: munch, chew, nibble, nip, snap. 2 he ate it in two bites: mouthful, piece, bit, morsel. 3 let's go out for a bite : a snack, a light meal, a quick meal; refreshments; informal a little something. 4 we came back from the picnic covered in insect bites: sting. 5 the appetizer had a fiery bite: piquancy, pungency, spiciness, strong flavor, tang, zest, sharpness, tartness; informal kick, punch, edge, zing.
Oxford Thesaurus
bite
bite verb 1 he bit a mouthful from the sandwich: sink one's teeth into, chew, munch, crunch, champ, tear at, masticate, eat; nibble at, gnaw at. 2 the insect does not bite people: puncture, prick, pierce, sting, wound. 3 the acid bites into the copper plate: corrode, eat into, eat away at, wear away, burn (into ), etch, erode, dissolve, destroy, consume. 4 my boots failed to bite: grip, hold, get a purchase. 5 there may be popular unrest as free-market measures begin to bite: take effect, have an effect, be effective, be efficacious, work, function, act, have results, take hold; succeed, be successful, work out, go as planned, have the desired effect /result; informal come off, pay off, do the trick, do the business; N. Amer. informal turn the trick. 6 a hundred or so retailers are expected to bite: accept, go for it, agree, respond; be lured, be enticed, be tempted, be allured; take the bait, rise to the bait. ▶noun 1 a bite on the ear can be very painful: nip, snap, chew, munch, nibble, gnaw. 2 an insect bite: puncture, prick, sting, wound. 3 Stephen ate a hot dog in three bites: mouthful, piece, morsel, bit. 4 I only have a bite at lunchtime: snack, light meal, something to eat, mouthful, soupçon, nibbles, titbit, savoury, appetizer; refreshments; informal bite to eat, a little something; Brit. informal elevenses. 5 the appetizer had a fiery bite: piquancy, pungency, spice, spiciness, saltiness, pepperiness, flavour, flavouring, savour, taste, tastiness, relish, tang, zest, sharpness, tartness, interest, edge, effect, potency; informal kick, punch, oomph, zing.
Spanish Dictionary
bíter
bíter nombre masculino Bebida alcohólica de sabor amargo y color rojo que se obtiene por maceración de diversas sustancias en ginebra; generalmente se toma como aperitivo y también se comercializa sin alcohol .ETIMOLOGÍA Variante de bitter (V.) con adaptación gráfica al español .El plural es bíteres .Puede encontrarse la grafía inglesa bitter .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
bite
bite /baɪt /〖原義は 「(歯で )裂く 割る 」〗動詞 ~s /-ts /; bit /bɪt /; bitten /bɪ́t (ə )n /; biting 他動詞 1 〈人 動物が 〉〈物 人 〉をかむ , …にかみつく, …をかみちぎる (off )▸ The dog bit me on the arm .その犬は私の腕をかんだ ▸ His middle finger has been bitten off .彼は中指をかみ切られた ▸ bite a hole in A A 〈衣服など 〉をかんで穴をあける ▸ bite one's fingernails つめをかむ (!神経質になっているときの動作 ) ▸ Once bitten twice shy .⦅ことわざ ⦆一度かみつかれると次から用心深くなる ; 「あつものにこりてなますを吹く 」2 〈虫 ヘビなどが 〉〈人など 〉を刺す; 〈カニなどが 〉〈物 〉をはさむ (!ハチなどが刺す場合はsting ) ▸ I got bitten (on the neck ) by a mosquito .(首を )蚊に刺された 3 〈タイヤが 〉 (しっかり )〈路面など 〉をとらえる; 〈歯車などが 〉〈物 〉にかみ合う (grip ).4 〈寒さが 〉〈人 〉にしみる; 〈霜が 〉〈物 〉をいためる; 〈酸が 〉〈金属 〉を腐食する ▸ be bitten by frost 霜やけになる 自動詞 1 〈人 動物が 〉【食べ物などに 】食いつく «into » ; «…に » かみつく «at , on » ; «…を » かみ切る «through » ▸ bite into a big hamburger 大きなハンバーガーにかぶりつく 2 〈虫 ヘビなどが 〉刺す .3 〈魚が 〉えさに食いつく, かかる .4 〈物が 〉【表面に 】食い込む «into » ; 〈タイヤが 〉【路面などを 】(しっかり )とらえる «on » ; 〈歯車などが 〉かみ合う .5 〈行為 政策などが 〉 (好ましくない )影響 [効果 ]をもたらす, (人に )こたえる .6 〈人が 〉 (詐欺などに )飛びつく, ひっかかる, だまされる .7 〈食べ物などが 〉 (舌に )ぴりぴりする .be b í tten with [by ] A 〈人が 〉Aに夢中である .b ì te b á ck 【人などに 】強い口調で言い返す «at » .b ì te A b á ck [b á ck A ]A 〈感情 言葉など 〉を口に出さずにこらえる .b í te into A 1 ↑自動詞 1 .2 ↑自動詞 4 .3 〈酸が 〉A 〈金属 〉を腐食する .B í te me! ⦅米俗 ⦆(相手の言葉に立腹して )なんだと .b ì te ó ff m ò re than one can ch é w 手に余ることをしようとする (!「かめないほどほおばる 」というところから ) .b í te on A 1 ↑自動詞 1 .2 A 〈問題 計画など 〉をよく考える, 検討する .I'll b í te .⦅話 ⦆いいよ, 君の答えを聞こう .Wh à t's b í ting you [him, her ]?⦅話 ⦆君 [彼, 彼女 ]は何を心配しているんだい .w ò n't b í te ⦅話 ⦆〈(目上の )人が 〉怖くない ▸ Don't worry. He won't bite .心配するな . 彼は怖くないから 名詞 複 ~s /-ts /1 C かむこと, かじること; (魚釣りの )あたり ▸ take [have ] a bite of chocolate チョコレートをひと口かじる (!⦅米 ⦆ ⦅英 ⦆ともにtakeが優勢 ) ▸ give A a vicious bite A 〈人 〉に手ひどくかみつく (≒ bite A viciously )▸ talk between bites of food 食べながら話をする 2 C かみ傷, (虫などの )刺し傷 .3 C 少量 ;〖単数形で 〗ひと口, ひとかじり ;⦅ くだけた話 ⦆軽食 (snack )▸ Let's have [get, grab ] a bite to eat .ちょっと軽く食べよう 4 〖a ~〗(刺すような )冷たさ .5 U (傷などの )痛み ; (演技 文体などの )鋭さ, 切れ味 ; (皮肉の )辛辣 (しんらつ )さ ;⦅ ほめて ⦆ (食べ物の )ぴりぴりする刺激 .6 C 〖通例単数形で 〗〘医 〙(歯の )かみ合わせ ; U (歯車などの )かみ合い .an ò ther [a s è cond ] b ì te at [of ] the ch é rry =two b ì tes at [of ] the ch é rry ⦅英 ⦆2度目の機会 .p ù t the b í te on A ⦅米俗 ⦆A 〈人 〉に金を貸せと言う, 金をせびる .t à ke a b í te out of A 〈物 税金などが 〉A 〈家計など 〉に食い込む ; 〈金 〉を奪う .
biter
bit er /báɪtə r /名詞 C 1 かむ人 [動物 ].2 だます人 ▸ The biter (is ) bit [bitten ].だまそうとしてだまされる ; 「ミイラ取りがミイラになる 」
bite-size
b í te-s ì ze b í te-s ì zed 形容詞 〖通例 名詞 の前で 〗1 ひと口大の .2 (小さくて )扱いやすい ; 理解しやすい .