bitch

名词 n. 动词 v.
发音 bĭch

英文释义

名词 n.
  1. A female dog or other canine, particularly a recent mother. countable,uncountable
    — My bitch just had puppies; they're so cute!
  2. A promiscuous woman, slut, whore. archaic,countable,offensive,uncountable
  3. A despicable or disagreeable, aggressive person, usually a woman. countable,offensive,slang,uncountable,vulgar
    — Near-synonyms: cunt (vulgar, offensive); see also Thesaurus:jerk
  4. A woman. countable,offensive,slang,uncountable,vulgar
    — Biggie, remember when I used to let you sleep on the couch, and beg the bitch to let you sleep in the house?
  5. A man considered soft, effeminate, weak, timid or pathetic in some way countable,offensive,uncountable,vulgar
  6. A man considered soft, effeminate, weak, timid or pathetic in some way; An obviously gay man. countable,derogatory,offensive,uncountable,vulgar
  7. A submissive person who does what others want; (prison slang) a man forced or coerced into a homoerotic relationship. countable,offensive,uncountable,vulgar
    — Dude, don't be a bitch. Assert yourself.
  8. A female sexual partner, typically in casual sexual relations countable,derogatory,idiomatic,slang,uncountable
  9. A female sexual partner, typically in casual sexual relations; a sexual partner countable,derogatory,humorous,idiomatic,slang
  10. A playful variation on dog (sense "man"). countable,informal,obsolete,uncountable
  11. Friend. colloquial,countable,humorous,uncountable,vulgar
    — What’s up, bitch?
  12. A complaint, especially when the complaint is unjustified. colloquial,countable,uncountable,vulgar
  13. A difficult or confounding problem. colloquial,countable,uncountable,vulgar
    — That level was a real bitch, don’t you think?
  14. A queen playing card, particularly the queen of spades in the card game of hearts. colloquial,countable,uncountable,vulgar
  15. Something unforgiving and unpleasant. countable,figuratively,uncountable,vulgar
    — […] he wrote to me last week telling me about an incredible bitch of a row blazing there on account of someone having been and gone and produced an unofficial magazine called Raddled, full of obscene libellous Oz-like filth. And what I thought, what Sammy and I thought, was – why not?
  16. Place; situation countable,informal,slang,uncountable,vulgar
    — I'm 'bout to get up outta this bitch.
  17. Tea (the drink). UK,countable,obsolete,uncountable
    — […] seldom gets "a little the worse for liquor," gives no swell parties, runs very little into debt, takes his cup of bitch at night, and goes quietly to bed, and thus he passes his time in a way a Varmint man would despise.
  18. A queen. countable,offensive,slang,uncountable,vulgar
动词 v.
  1. To behave or act as a bitch; especially, to complain excessively. intransitive,vulgar
  2. To complain or criticize spitefully, often for the sake of complaining rather than in order to have the problem corrected. intransitive,vulgar
    — All you ever do is bitch about the food I cook for you!
  3. To spoil, to ruin. transitive,vulgar
    — 'You're a Franco-maniac…You're thought to be a French agent…That's what's bitching your career!'

词形变化

bitches plural betch alternative biatch alternative biotch alternative beatch alternative beotch alternative bih alternative binch alternative bish alternative biyatch alternative biyotch alternative beeyatch alternative beeyotch alternative bizatch alternative biz-atch alternative biznatch alternative b-word alternative rhymes-with-rich alternative bitches present,singular,third-person bitching participle,present bitched participle,past bitched past

词汇关系

近义词

词源

词源 1
From Middle English biche, bicche, from Old English biċċe, from Proto-West Germanic *bikkjā, from Proto-Germanic *bikjǭ (“female dog”) (compare Norwegian bikkje (“dog, bitch”), Old Danish bikke (“bitch”)), from Proto-Germanic *bikjaną (“to thrust, attack”) (compare Old Norse bikkja (“to plunge into water”), Dutch bikken (“to hack”)). Related to bicker.
词源 2
From Middle English biche, bicche, from Old English biċċe, from Proto-West Germanic *bikkjā, from Proto-Germanic *bikjǭ (“female dog”) (compare Norwegian bikkje (“dog, bitch”), Old Danish bikke (“bitch”)), from Proto-Germanic *bikjaną (“to thrust, attack”) (compare Old Norse bikkja (“to plunge into water”), Dutch bikken (“to hack”)). Related to bicker.
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