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  • Hi. This is Gill at www.engvid.com,

  • and today's lesson is giving you eight different expressions,

  • using the word "bite". Okay?

  • So, first of all, to give you the literal meaning of "bite", in case you don't know

  • the word: If you bite something, you do that. Okay? You either bite... Maybe bite into an

  • apple, or hopefully you don't bite your fingernails, which is a very bad habit. But it's always

  • to do with "mm, mm, mm", doing that. Okay, so that's the literal meaning of "bite", but

  • the examples here are expressions, which means metaphorical meanings, metaphors, idioms,

  • so they're particular ways of using the word "bite",

  • which sometimes create a picture in

  • your mind, which expresses the idea in quite an interesting way.

  • Okay, so let's have a look at the first one. So, if someone says:

  • "Oh, that woman, she bit my head off!"

  • Obviously, it's not literal. It's not the literal meaning. She can't have

  • literally bitten your head off; it would be impossible, because her mouth wouldn't be

  • big enough, to start with, to go like that. But it means if you say something to somebody,

  • and they just reply in a very bad, aggressive way, unpleasant, like:

  • "What do you mean?" or "Oh, don't bother me now, I'm busy",

  • things like that, that's called "biting somebody's head off".

  • Okay? You go to them in a friendly way, and you get this unpleasant response,

  • so that's "biting somebody's head off". Or, if you say:

  • "Oh, oh I do like that picture up there", and someone else says:

  • "Ugh, it's dreadful! How can you possibly like that?

  • Stupid of you to like that picture",

  • that's really, you know, biting somebody's head off

  • when you've just expressed a... You know, a nice, pleasant opinion about a picture.

  • So: "biting somebody's head off". Right, okay. Enough of that.

  • Oh, and then the next one almost follows, because:

  • "She bit my head off!",

  • "I had to bite my tongue."

  • Which means... Mm. It's not literally "mm, mm, mm", biting your tongue,

  • but if you bite your tongue, you're holding your tongue with your teeth, it means you

  • can't speak. So, when this woman bites your head off, rather than you reply and say:

  • "Don't be so horrible", and then some argument begins - instead, to avoid it getting worse into

  • an argument, or a fight or anything like that, you bite your tongue.

  • "I had to bite my tongue."

  • Just keep quiet, don't say anything, because it will only make the situation worse. Okay.

  • So: "She bit my head off!", "I had to bite my tongue."

  • Okay, so they almost belong together, there. Okay.

  • Next one: "We'll have to bite the bullet."

  • Okay. Now, this is quite a tricky one, but

  • "to bite the bullet", a "bullet" is what you have in a gun that fires. So,

  • that sort of shape.

  • A metal bullet with maybe gunpowder inside, something that explodes or hits, hopefully

  • not another person. Okay. But "to bite the bullet",

  • it means sort of catching the bullet

  • in your mouth before it goes through the back of your head. It's horrible to think of, but

  • there's a... There's a circus trick, I think, where in the circus somebody stands and they have a gun firing

  • at them, and they catch the bullet in their mouth. I don't know how that works. I don't

  • know if it's real, or whether it's just imaginary. I don't know how somebody can catch a bullet

  • in their mouth, because it must be going very fast. But anyway, "to bite the bullet", it

  • sort of suggests that circus trick, but what it really means is we've really got to tackle

  • a problem. There's a problem, we have to deal with it, tackle it. So, we've got to bite

  • the bullet. We've got to sort this problem out. Maybe in your home, there's some repair...

  • The roof. The roof needs to be repaired, the rain is coming through, and you don't know

  • how to deal with it, but you just say: "Look, we've got to do this. We can't just have rain

  • coming through every day. We'll have to bite the bullet, go and find some company who will

  • come, and we'll have to pay them thousands of pounds for them to fix it, but we've got

  • to do it." So that's "biting the bullet". It's, you know, something you don't really

  • want to have to do, but you've got to do it. Okay.

  • Next one: If you've "bitten off more than you can chew"...

  • And "to chew" is what you

  • do when you're eating food. The food is in your mouth, and you're doing... You're chewing

  • it with your teeth. Right? If you bite off more than you can chew... If it's literal,

  • you've bitten off a large piece of bread, maybe, and you're trying to chew it, but there's

  • so much bread, it's sticking out here, and there's more of it than you can get into your

  • mouth; you can't chew it. So... But this means, in a metaphorical sense, you've taken on a

  • project, some job, it's a very, very big project,

  • and you start trying to do it, and then you find:

  • "Oh my goodness, this is so big, I can't do this. It's too much. Too much for me, I can't do it."

  • Or you can't do it. "You've bitten off more than you can chew."

  • You've taken on too much, so you've got to either stop, or get other people to help you, something

  • like that. Okay.

  • Next one: "His bark is worse than his bite." Okay?

  • Now, this sounds like a dog, really,

  • because dogs bark.

  • [Barks]

  • That's not a very good bark, but you know what dogs sound like.

  • Yeah. And dogs also bite sometimes; they bite people, they bite other dogs, they bite cats,

  • anything they can get a hold of, really. They like to bite. Okay. But: "His bark"-the sound

  • he makes-"is worse than his bite" means he makes a lot of noise and it sounds frightening:

  • "Oo, a big barking noise, oo, help, ah", but he doesn't really bite very much. You know,

  • he's not dangerous. He can make a lot of noise, but he doesn't really do a lot of damage.

  • He's not dangerous. So, it can be a dog, but it can refer to a person as well. If it's

  • a man who shouts a lot and makes a lot of noise, and you think:

  • "Oh my goodness, what's he going to do?"

  • but he doesn't actually hit people or hurt people, he just makes a lot

  • of noise; it's just the sound.

  • The voice is loud, but the... And the other... You know,

  • there's nothing much else to worry about. If you can bear to hear the loud voice, that's

  • all you have to deal with, really. You don't have to worry about being bitten, or hit,

  • or anything like that. Okay.

  • Next one, this is to do with the weather:

  • "It's a biting wind today." Biting.

  • So, if you're out on a really cold day and it's a really cold wind, and you can feel the cold

  • coming through, it's as if it's biting you. Okay, with teeth, if the wind has teeth, which

  • it doesn't, but it feels like cold teeth biting at you, getting in under your clothes. So

  • "a biting wind", very cold. Right.

  • "You can only have one bite of the cherry."

  • Okay? So, a cherry

  • is a very small piece of fruit that grows on a cherry tree, it's red,

  • it's very nice, but it's very small. So it

  • means you can only bite once, and then maybe hand it to somebody else and they can have

  • a bite, but it's quite small. So, this is something that you can't get a lot from; there's

  • not much there. You can... A cherry is very nice, but there's not very much of it. Okay.

  • So, not many opportunities. It's a situation where you can't get much from something.

  • And then, finally, to describe a person:

  • "He's a hard-bitten type." Okay? So, this is about

  • a person's personality, what they are like as a person. If they're hard-bitten...

  • If they... You know, it suggests they've been bitten during their... Throughout their life,

  • if they've had a lot of bad things happening to them, it makes them quite hard and self-protective,

  • not very friendly, not very outgoing. So, if it's someone who's not... Not very sympathetic,

  • they're a bit cold - they're hard-bitten because of experiences, bad experiences they've had

  • in their life. They become hard-bitten. Okay.

  • So, I hope that helps to give you some useful ways of using the... The... "To bite".

  • If you'd like to visit the website, www.engvid.com, you'll find a quiz there on this subject.

  • So please give that a try. And please come back again soon for another lesson. Okay.

  • Bye for now.

Hi. This is Gill at www.engvid.com,

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A2 初級 英國腔

8種英語中使用BITE的表達方式 (8 Expressions using BITE in English)

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    Flora Hu 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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