- have to bite the bullet
- expr.in den sauren Apfel beißen müssen ausdr.
English-german dictionary. 2013.
English-german dictionary. 2013.
bite the bullet — If you have to bite the bullet, you have to accept or face something unpleasant because it cannot be avoided … The small dictionary of idiomes
Bite the bullet — To bite the bullet is to accept the consequences of a hard choice. [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=yNjM75ItNKAC pg=PA29 dq=bite+the+bullet+philosopher sig=zxV AuvTVtdhoqLrS iiCY07o2I#PPA28,M1 Thinking from A to Z p.28] ] It is derived… … Wikipedia
bite the bullet — phrasal : to face up to an unpleasant situation by taking action we are now seeing responsible industries beginning to bite the bullet and clean up waste sites Harold Gershowitz * * * bite the bullet informal phrase to force yourself to do… … Useful english dictionary
bite the bullet — If you have to bite the bullet, you have to accept or face something unpleasant because it cannot be avoided. (Dorking School Dictionary) *** If you bite the bullet, you accept something unpleasant because you cannot avoid it. If… … English Idioms & idiomatic expressions
bite the bullet — tv. to accept something difficult and try to live with it. □ You are just going to have to bite the bullet and make the best of it. □ Jim bit the bullet and accepted what he knew had to be … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions
bite the bullet — informal to force yourself to do something difficult or unpleasant that you have been avoiding doing We ll just have to bite the bullet and get on with it … English dictionary
Bite the bullet — If you have to bite the bullet, you have to accept or face something unpleasant because it cannot be avoided … Dictionary of English idioms
bite the bullet — [v] take it be forced, bow to fate, face the music*, have no choice, know no alternative, pay the piper*, stand up and take it, swallow the pill*, take one’s medicine*, take the rap; concepts 23,96 … New thesaurus
bite the bullet — endure in a difficult situation, face a difficult situation bravely I have decided to bite the bullet and begin studying for my Master s degree … Idioms and examples
bite — bite1 [ baıt ] (past tense bit [ bıt ] ; past participle bit|ten [ bıtn ] ) verb ** 1. ) intransitive or transitive to use your teeth to cut or break something, usually in order to eat it: I wish you wouldn t bite your nails. bite into: Tom had… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
bite — 1 verb past tense bit, past participle bitten 1 WITH YOUR TEETH (I, T) to cut or crush something with your teeth: Be careful! My dog bites. | Do you bite your fingernails? (+ into/through): biting into a juicy apple | They had to bite through the … Longman dictionary of contemporary English