Bite : v. tr. « Bite ", it is grind (something) to the bite, making a snap.
Eat, consume.
Beautiful to eat: very pretty.
Dilapidate, dissipate his money.
Bite a sandwich in no time: devour.
Crunch money: spend a lot.
Crunch the pie: have a drink.
To bite into an inheritance: to squander it.
Enjoy life to the fullest: live unbridled.
He crunches crazy money (squandering).
Take an ecstasy pill.
To bite a chicken: to send a girl.
To eat: to be homosexual.
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Bite into it
The expression "Crunch the brat": Wait a long time, moping.
In the XNUMXth century, when the expression first appeared, the doors or their uprights were fitted with bells or knockers. The latter, since the Middle Ages, had the name of marmot, because they often wore a somewhat grotesque figurine like the heads of children (marmot in the same century meant "monkey").
In the XNUMXth century, when the expression first appeared, the doors or their uprights were fitted with bells or knockers. The latter, since the Middle Ages, had the name of marmot, because they often wore a somewhat grotesque figurine like the heads of children (marmot in the same century meant "monkey").
In the same era, eat meant "to strike". Indeed, a croque-note was a bad musician, for example, and the croquet game derives its name from the verb with this meaning.
So, bite the kid simply meant "knocking on a door knocker" in front of which one could wait a very long time and knock relentlessly if it remained desperately closed.