Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. May 22, 2015 · 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. Share. Improve this answer. answered May 22, 2015 at 15:02.

  2. Oct 26, 2016 · 1. To bite the bullet means to decide to do something difficult or unpleasant that one has been putting off or hesitating over, according to Google. I'm not sure that I can use it when I was supposed to clean the house but I haven't done until down to the wire. For example, "Now, I need to bite the bullet and clean the house."

  3. Jul 22, 2023 · Defenders of the view can try to show that it doesn't actually entail the alleged logical consequence, or they can “bite the bullet” and sorrowfully admit that the view really does entail the outrageous logical consequence while at the same time maintaining that the view (despite its regrettably outrageous implications) should be accepted ...

  4. Dec 20, 2019 · The story is that, back in the days when your buddy rather than an ER surgeon would remove a bullet in your arm, you'd be handed a bare bullet (this was before cartridges, so it was a chunk of bare lead) and told to bite it, to help you deal with the pain.

  5. Dec 15, 2014 · The mental distinction between the essential point being made and the bullet • marking that essential point is so subtle that all three discrete entities can be independently referred to as a bullet point: the marker • is a bullet point in the sense of dot as in midpoint, bullet describing that mark with a first documented use of 1950.

  6. 1. I understand : I took a bite of my pizza = I had a mouthful of a piece taken from my pizza (perhaps just cut off with a knife). I took a bite off my pizza = I had a mouthful, biting the pizza with my teeth. (I put the sentences in the past, since it is not easy to speak with your mouth full.) Share.

  7. 'To bite the bullet' is also a useful phrase in informal situations - here's the definition from Wikipedia: To "bite the bullet" is to endure a painful or otherwise unpleasant situation that is seen as unavoidable. So, instead of wasting my time trying to program the interface, I’ll bite the bullet and use Nero.

  8. While the sentence "This is it" can of course be literal, when there is a referent for "it", the kind of use you are referring to is not, because there is no referent for 'it' already established either in the discourse or by deixis; and I'm sure that if you asked the hearers what "it" was you would not get the same answer from all; yet, they all understand the phrase.

  9. May 28, 2014 · To bite back means "react angrily." To slam in a journalistic sense means to "criticize severely." As you can see, the terms aren't metaphorical equivalents or alternatives; "eat for lunch" and "bite back" were simply somewhat playful uses of common expressions that related to the subject being about school lunches.

  10. Sep 9, 2015 · @200_success "bite the bullet" suggests inevitable consequences, yes, but not inevitable action. To borrow OP's question example: if you want to know what someone thinks about you, even though it might be negative, maybe you should just bite the bullet and ask them.

  1. People also search for