English edit

Pronunciation edit

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Verb edit

bite the biscuit (third-person singular simple present bites the biscuit, present participle biting the biscuit, simple past bit the biscuit, past participle bitten the biscuit)

  1. (slang) To die.
    • 1987 February 16, David Scanlan, “Way up north”, in Ottawa Citizen, retrieved 19 Aug. 2010, page D6:
      David Scott . . . admits he "nearly bit the biscuit," during a 1985 trip to Kluane National Park in the Yukon. Scott was crossing a chest-deep river with a racing current, when he slipped. The near-freezing water whisked him away.
    • 2007, Jack Henderson, Circumference of Darkness[1], →ISBN, page 199:
      Trained assassins shoot people in the head, and that should be a relatively painless way to bite the biscuit.
  2. (idiomatic) To undertake an unpleasant task or to acknowledge an unfavorable situation or responsibility; bite the bullet.
    • 1999, Robert Hartman, Masters of the Millennium[2], →ISBN, page 5:
      Weibe, who fought the effects of allergy medicine and a winless streak since the Hardee's Golf Classic (1986), had to bite the biscuit and settle for second place.
    • 2003, Steve Duno, Every Dog's Survival Guide to Living with a Neurotic Owner[3], →ISBN, page 225:
      Sometimes owners need to bite the biscuit and call in professional help in order to solve a nasty canine behavioral problem.

Synonyms edit