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Falafels Vegetarian Falafel. Follow us on Instagram. You didn't have to write it like an epistle! My shiny metal I found another Shakespeare ref for you; v. How's that a dilemma? Shouldn't someone have ended their answer with "If you don't like my answer, bite me! Add a comment. Active Oldest Votes. Here is according to Wikipedia : Bite me is typically used as a US idiomatic expression of discontent or annoyance with another party According to the Online Slang Dictionary : a command, similar to "Go to hell!
Cambridge Online Dictionary tells us how to use it: used to say to someone that they have made you feel angry or embarrassed It can also be used as a statement of contempt, or defiance. Improve this answer. Thursagen Thursagen Good answer, but for clarity I want to mention that in my experience, "bite me" is much less intense of a phrase than "go to hell".
You kinda mention this, but I want to emphasize that often this phrase is often said as a super soft version of "stuff it". Community Bot 1. While plausible, the Wiki Answers entry you reference has no sources itself; if you can dig up a reference to this phrase from the '50s that indicates it formerly held these connotations, it would improve this answer considerably.
I have never heard "bite my crank", and would not know that "crank" was in any way a variant of "cock". However, it does ring true that "bite me" evolved from "suck my cock".
My understanding of the evolution was there was a shift from "suck" to "bite" simply by virture of both being tethered to the concept of the use of the mouth. The words merely changed because people are always looking for variants and flourishes when it comes to slang hostilities. Plausible history here: english. Shakespeare is nowhere to be found.
Fraser Orr Fraser Orr Shakespeare is most certainly to be found! The reference is from The Tempest II. Note: your answer has been merged here from english. You might wish to adjust your answer to fit the somewhat-broader focus of this question.
Sylvia Sylvia 31 1 1 bronze badge. This remark is particularly provocative when delivered by a woman to a man. For men it's best not to take the bait.
While you can use the phrase when you mean "deal with it", I am of the opinion that it most emphatically doesn't mean "deal with it", but instead is closer to when you don't like what the other person has said or done, and express your contempt. It's really not different than "eff you" sorry, I can't bring myself to say it. Featured on Meta. Now live: A fully responsive profile.
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