What's the difference between bite and bitten?

Bite


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To seize with the teeth, so that they enter or nip the thing seized; to lacerate, crush, or wound with the teeth; as, to bite an apple; to bite a crust; the dog bit a man.
  • (v. t.) To puncture, abrade, or sting with an organ (of some insects) used in taking food.
  • (v. t.) To cause sharp pain, or smarting, to; to hurt or injure, in a literal or a figurative sense; as, pepper bites the mouth.
  • (v. t.) To cheat; to trick; to take in.
  • (v. t.) To take hold of; to hold fast; to adhere to; as, the anchor bites the ground.
  • (v. i.) To seize something forcibly with the teeth; to wound with the teeth; to have the habit of so doing; as, does the dog bite?
  • (v. i.) To cause a smarting sensation; to have a property which causes such a sensation; to be pungent; as, it bites like pepper or mustard.
  • (v. i.) To cause sharp pain; to produce anguish; to hurt or injure; to have the property of so doing.
  • (v. i.) To take a bait into the mouth, as a fish does; hence, to take a tempting offer.
  • (v. i.) To take or keep a firm hold; as, the anchor bites.
  • (v.) The act of seizing with the teeth or mouth; the act of wounding or separating with the teeth or mouth; a seizure with the teeth or mouth, as of a bait; as, to give anything a hard bite.
  • (v.) The act of puncturing or abrading with an organ for taking food, as is done by some insects.
  • (v.) The wound made by biting; as, the pain of a dog's or snake's bite; the bite of a mosquito.
  • (v.) A morsel; as much as is taken at once by biting.
  • (v.) The hold which the short end of a lever has upon the thing to be lifted, or the hold which one part of a machine has upon another.
  • (v.) A cheat; a trick; a fraud.
  • (v.) A sharper; one who cheats.
  • (v.) A blank on the edge or corner of a page, owing to a portion of the frisket, or something else, intervening between the type and paper.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Some dental applications of the pressure measuring sheet, such as the measurement of biting pressure and balance during normal and unilateral biting, were examined.
  • (2) But do you know the thing that really bites?” he pointed to his home, which was not visible behind an overgrown hedge.
  • (3) Admission venom levels also correlated with the extent of local swelling and the occurrence of tissue necrosis at the site of the bite.
  • (4) The mosquitoes coming to bite in bedrooms were monitored with light traps set beside untreated bednets.
  • (5) The EMG silent periods (SP) produced in the open-close-clench cycle and jaw-jerk reflex were compared for duration before and after treatment with an occlusal bite splint.
  • (6) In Colchester, David Sherwood of Fenn Wright reported: "High tenant demand but increasingly tenants in rent arrears as the recession bites."
  • (7) To test the hypothesis that EAA agonists are involved in transmission of nociceptive information in the spinal cord, we tested the effect of various opioid, sigma and phencyclidine compounds on the action of NMDA in the tail-flick, hot-plate and biting and scratching nociceptive tests.
  • (8) The most reproducible instrument was the combination of Regisil, an elastic impression material, and a Rinn XCP bite block.
  • (9) Changes of mineral content in the approximal enamel of the teeth were determined in situ with quantitative bite-wing radiography.
  • (10) In contrast, large territories may reflect widespread motor-unit actions, advantageous in force development where fine movement control is less important, as in biting in the intercuspal position or opposing gravity.
  • (11) In the last 5 years, 29 children have been treated in our institution for snake bites, all with signs of envenomation.
  • (12) Forty patients with Crotalidae snake bites were evaluated and treated over a 7-year period.
  • (13) Considering the construction of the bite, beside the two usual procedures: a direct and indirect method with the different steps of the laboratory, we can realize a mixed one which all the advantages without the defects of both.
  • (14) The peak biting activity of the vector and peak appearance of microfilariae in the peripheral blood occurred at about 01.00 h, which accounts for the optimum infection of the vector population.
  • (15) The results of this study indicate that, with all other factors held constant, a patient's attrition score tends to: increase with age, increase with bite depth, decrease initially with overjet until a critical value and then increase, and be unaffected by sex, interincisal angle, U1 to NA angle, Angle classification, posterior or anterior cross bites.
  • (16) The charity Bite the Ballot , which persuaded hundreds of thousands to register before the last general election, is to set up “democracy cafes” in Starbucks branches, laying on experts to explain how to register and vote, and what the referendum is all about (Bite the Ballot does not take sides but merely encourages participation).
  • (17) Masticatory efficiency was measured by means of a spectrophotometer, using adenosine triphosphate (ATP) granules, the biting force and occlusal contact area.
  • (18) Wearing the bite plane mainly reduced activities of the temporal muscles.
  • (19) Flank marks, attacks, bites, and retreats were scored over a 15 min test period during which steroid-injected animals were paired in a neutral arena with vehicle-injected conspecifics.
  • (20) African children had significantly fewer prevalences of distal bite, lateral crossbite and crowding than Finnish children did.

Bitten


Definition:

  • (p. p.) of Bite
  • () p. p. of Bite.
  • (a.) Terminating abruptly, as if bitten off; premorse.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) It's an anxious time for those 180,000 teenagers chasing the last university places in clearing ; nails are bitten to the quick, eyes glazed from internet searching.
  • (2) Strikers, Hobblers, Conchies and Reds: A Radical History of Bristol 1880-1939 (2014) As the cultural consensus in British society moved further and further to the right, it seemed that the efforts to create a wider, more democratically inclusive history from below had bitten the dust.
  • (3) After hiding in bushes, where she was bitten by a snake, she decided to return to her family, only to find them being lined up next to one of the newly dug pits that had appeared near Tutsi homes.
  • (4) A 4-year-old girl was admitted 30 hours after being bitten by a black widow spider.
  • (5) From the mosquito catches and the results of their dissections for filarial larvae it could be estimated, that during the observation year a person in the savannah villages would be bitten annually by 18,165 and 36,450 vector mosquitoes respectively, and would receive 236 and 536 infective bites with 570 and 1211 infective larvae.
  • (6) There I got sunburnt, was bitten by a tick and chased by a sheep, and ran out of water, but I made it.
  • (7) Leather, who celebrated his seventh consecutive week at the top of the Amazon chart with his novella The Basement , about a serial killer in New York, also occupies fourth place with Hard Landing , another thriller, and 11th place with Once Bitten , a vampire novel.
  • (8) Last month, for example, the Daily Telegraph's Peter Oborne bemoaned their "devastating" fate, in a piece worth quoting at reasonable length, if only to prove that the idea of an out-of-touch elite blithely wreaking havoc is not the preserve of hard-bitten lefties.
  • (9) • This article was amended on 13 October 2014 to remove a statement that a two-year-old child in Meliandou, later identified as west Africa’s first case of Ebola, was bitten by a bat.
  • (10) "If we were to change that now because Luis Suárez has bitten someone then that would be a terrible message to send out.
  • (11) All the patients were bitten in the leg and the biopsy specimens were obtained from the contralateral gastrocnemius muscle in the middle of the lower leg.
  • (12) 100 consecutive patients whose finger had been bitten by another person, or who had cut it on a tooth in a fight, have been studied.
  • (13) The results demonstrate that meadow-mice, Columbian ground-squirrels, golden-mantled ground-squirrels, chipmunks and snowshoe hares (the latter to a lesser extent), when bitten by infected ticks, respond with rickettsiaemias of sufficient length and degree to infect normal larval D. andersoni.
  • (14) All were farm laborers and 35 of them were bitten in the lower limbs.
  • (15) None of the demographic characteristics available in this study distinguished between children who were bitten compared with those who were not bitten with the exception of number of days of enrollment.
  • (16) A young woman was bitten on the shoulder by a female Steatoda nobilis spider, in Worthing on the south coast of England.
  • (17) Twenty-one birds were bitten; chickens constituted 85.7%, turkeys 12% and ducks 4.8% of this number.
  • (18) The astute Rawling pointed out to Klitschko that his opponent was capable of anything – Chisora had bitten one opponent in the ring while kissing another at a press conference.
  • (19) The second patient, an inhabitant of northern Chile (fourth region), was allegedly bitten by Triatoma infestans and was an intravenous drug addict.
  • (20) Anticholinesterase did not improve paralysis in 2 patients bitten by kraits.

Words possibly related to "bite"

Words possibly related to "bitten"