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  1. Dictionary
    Bite the dust
    • be killed

    Powered by Oxford Languages

  2. BITE THE DUST definition: 1. to fall so that your body hits the ground heavily: 2. to die 3. to end in failure: . Learn more.

  3. 1. : to bite or have the habit of biting something. This cat bites. 2. of a weapon or tool : to cut, pierce, or take hold. bites down on the part. The anchor bites into the ocean floor. 3. : to cause irritation or smarting.

  4. Mar 14, 2011 · According to some Spanish sources, the expression "morder el polvo" (literally translated: bite the dust/powder) - which means to die or to lose - comes from the "fact" that in the middle ages, when a knight was about to die, would put some dirt in his mouth as a way to express his love of the land. Seems more poetic than literal, but the ...

  5. If something bites the dust, it fails or stops existing. With the news that milk chocolate can help cut cholesterol, yet another healthy eating fad bites the dust. Quite a few restaurants have bitten the dust recently.

  6. If something bites the dust, it fails or stops existing. With the news that milk chocolate can help cut cholesterol, yet another healthy eating fad bites the dust. Quite a few restaurants have bitten the dust recently.

  7. 4 days ago · bite the dust. to fail or to stop existing. There are thousands of restaurants in and around London. Some make big money. Most break even, and quite a few have bitten the dust. to die. This expression is used to refer to someone's death in a humorous way.

  8. Literally, to fall face down in the dirt; to suffer a defeat: “Once again, the champion wins, and another contender bites the dust.”

  9. Meaning. Die, especially in a violent or sudden way. Examples. Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid bit the dust at the end of the movie. Where did it originate?

  10. Meaning. The idiom "bite the dust" is a figurative expression used to mean "to accept or endure an unpleasant, difficult, or embarrassing situation." The phrase originated from the practice of biting on a piece of leather or cloth as a way to cope with pain during surgery or amputations.

  11. What's the origin of the phrase 'Bite the dust'? Given the many 1930s B-feature cowboy movies in which, in the outdated language of the time, the bad guys, or occasionally the pesky redskins, would ‘bite the dust’, we might expect this to be of American origin. It isn’t though.

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