noun 1.a female dog: The bitch won first place in the sporting dogs category.
2.a female of canines generally.
3.Slang.a.a malicious, unpleasant, selfish person, especially a woman.
c.Disparaging and Offensive. any woman.
4.Slang. a person who performs demeaning tasks for another; servant:
Tom is so her bitch; she just ordered him to go fetch her some pizza—and he went without a word. 5.Slang. a convict who is in a homosexual relationship and/or dominant relationship willingly or unwillingly in the prison setting: The new inmate was immediately forced to be the bitch of the prison's top dog.
6.Slang.a.a complaint: What keeps me sane are my regular bitch sessions with my friends.
b.anything difficult or unpleasant: That test was a real bitch.
c.anything memorable, especially something exceptionally good: You threw one bitch of a party last night.
verb (used without object) 7.Slang. to complain; gripe: They bitched about the service, then about the bill.
00:10
Superb-itch
is always a great word to know.
So is callithumpian. Does it mean:
So is bezoar. Does it mean:
So is slumgullion. Does it mean:
verb (used with object) 8.Slang. to spoil; bungle (sometimes followed by
up ):
He bitched the job completely. You really bitched up this math problem.
Idioms 9.sit/ride bitch, to sit uncomfortably between two others in the middle of the front or back seat of a car, particularly one with a raised section in the middle resulting in being forced to bring one knees up in an bent position: When I was young, I was the smallest, so I was always stuck sitting bitch. Please don't make me ride bitch again!
Origin:
before 1000; Middle English bicche, Old English bicce; cognate with Old Norse bikkja
Related forms su·per·bitch, noun
Word story
How shocked and offended will people be if you use this word? Well, that all depends on how you are using it and what you are referring to. Originally, bitch simply meant a female dog, and it still does. But around the year 1400, it gained currency as a disparaging term for a woman, originally specifically “a lewd or sensual woman,” and then more generally “a malicious or unpleasant woman.” The word is first found used this way in the Chester Plays of the 1400's, which has the line “Who callest thou queine, skabde bitch?,” translated by one writer into modern English as “Who are you calling a whore, you miserable bitch?” By the 1800's, bitch was considered “the most offensive appellation that can be given to an English woman,” to the point where people started using euphemisms for the literal sense, such as lady dog and she dog.
But language keeps evolving, and bitch can now also be applied to a man, to a complaint, and to any difficult or unpleasant thing or situation. Used as a verb, we can talk about complaining (“bitching and moaning”), or bungling things (“bitching something up”), or riding in an uncomfortable position in a car (“sitting bitch”). When used in any of these ways, it's more slang than vulgarity, more colorful interjection than cause for offense. Nevertheless, care must be taken—there is a big difference between bitching about somebody and calling them a bitch! (Though it's O.K. to call their female dog that.)
Popular references
—The BITCH Manifesto: Classic feminist article (1970) written by Jo Freeman under the pen name Joreen. It reclaimed the word “bitch” as a term of empowerment rather than one of abuse.
—Bitch: A feminist magazine commenting on popular culture and media, founded in 1996.
—Bitch: The stage name of a politically outspoken female rock vocalist/violinist and actress.
—Skinny Bitch: A diet book (2005) written by Rory Freedman and Kim Barnouin.
—No One's the Bitch: A book (2009), Web site, and forum that supports mother and stepmother relationships. Started by Jennifer Newcomb Marine and Carol Marine.
—Stitch 'n Bitch: A network of groups of people who knit and crochet.
Related Quotations “The rogues slighted me into the river with as little remorse as they would have drowned a bitch's blind puppies.“
—Falstaff, Merry Wives of Windsor, act III, scene V William Shakespeare (1602)
“We're all nervous as a wolf bitch in heat.“
—Paul Engle, “The Last Whiskey Cup“ The Great American Parade ed. H. J. Duteil (1935)
“Bitch: … the most offensive appellation that can be given to an English woman, even more provoking than that of whore, as may be gathered from the regular Billinsgate or St. Giles's answers, ‘I may be a whore, but can't be a bitch.’“
—Francis Grose, Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue (1785)
“The bitch that I mean is not a dog.“
—English proverbial saying, Gnomologia: Adagies and Proverbs; Wise Sentences and Witty Sayings, Ancient and Modern, Foreign and British Thomas Fuller (1732)
“Kind of a Bitch: Why I Like Hillary Clinton“
—Camille Paglia, Vamps & Tramps: New Essays (1995)
“He's my bitch, and when he says my name, we just sell that many more records.“
—David Lee Roth, talking about Sammy Hagar, Everybody Wants Some: The Van Halen Saga Ian Christe (2007)
“I liked the idea of having me a kept senator. You might say he's my bitch.“
—Stanford Diehl, Angel in the Front Room, Devil Out Back (2001)
“What a bitch of a thing prose is! It is never finished, there is always something to be done over.“
—Gustave Flaubert, in a letter to Louise Colet, The Selected Letters of Gustave Flaubert ed. and transl. Francis Steegmuller (1953)
“Sometimes you just have to stop and bitch about the roses.“
—Man to woman, in a cartoon by Christopher Weyant, The New Yorker (December 20, 2004)