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woord beschrijving voor " bit "
  • een metalen staaf die een paard in de bek gedaan wordt om het dier berijdbaar te maken
  • een gebitsbeschermer
  • in de informatica en de computertechnologie de kleinste eenheid van informatie
  • #Nederlands
  • tegenwoordige tijd van bite#Nynorsk

woord beschrijving voor " beetje "
  • een ~; een kleine hoeveelheid

Beispiele für " bit "
  • As soon as you 'bite' that sandwich, you'll know how good it is.
  • That dog is about to 'bite'!
  • I needed snow chains to make the tires 'bite'.
  • Are the fish 'biting' today?
  • I've planted the story. Do you think they'll 'bite'?
  • These mosquitoes are really 'biting' today!
  • This music really 'bites'.
  • He's 'biting' my style.
  • That snake 'bite' really hurts!
  • After just one night in the jungle I was covered with mosquito 'bites'.
  • There were only a few 'bites' left on the plate.
  • That's really a 'bite'!
  • That song is a 'bite' of my song!
  • I'll have a quick 'bite' to quiet my stomach until dinner.
  • My 'bitch' just had puppies: they're so cute!
  • Ann gossiped about me and mocked my work; sometimes she can be a real 'bitch'!
  • What’s up, my 'bitch'?
  • How my 'bitches' been doin'?
  • Do you have to ask your girl before you do everything? You must be the 'bitch' in the relationship.
  • Question 5 was a real 'bitch', don’t you think?
  • That's a 'bitch' of a question. (Or, a 'bitch' of a problem, etc.)
  • Look, I saw you 'bitching' about me yesterday, I know how you feel: why can't you say it to my face?
  • All you ever do is 'bitch' about the food I cook for you!
  • You really 'bitched' up this time!-->
  • After we found the freshwater spring we were more confident that the place was habitable.
  • Television and film, not Vogue and similar magazines, are the 'arbiters' of fashion.
  • The coffee was bitter.
  • A bitter wind blew from the north.
  • '1999:' It was at the end of February, ... when the world was cold, and a bitter wind howled down the moors.... — Neil Gaiman, Stardust, pg. 31 (Perennial paperback edition)
  • They're bitter enemies.
  • I've been bitter ever since that defeat.
  • Benjamin Franklin's designation of "positive" and "negative" to different charges was 'arbitrary'. In fact, electrons flow in the opposite direction to conventional current.
  • The decision to use 18 years as the legal age of adulthood was 'arbitrary', as both age 17 and 19 were reasonable alternatives.
  • "The Russian trials were Stalin's purges, with which he attempted to consolidate his power. Like most people in the West, I believed these show trials to be the 'arbitrary' acts of a cruel dictator." ([http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Einstein Max Born, Letters to Einstein])
  • The equation is true for an 'arbitrary' value of x.
  • an 'ambitious' style
  • He wanted to 'exhibit' his baseball cards.
  • The players 'exhibited' great skill.
  • I now 'exhibit' this bloody hammer.
  • Will you be 'exhibiting' this year?
  • The museum's new 'exhibit' is drawing quite a crowd.
  • 'Exhibit' A is this photograph of the corpse.
  • The restaurant 'prohibits' smoking on the patio.
  • The 'indubitable' effect of the potion convinced many unbelievers.
  • If we build logically upwards from a few 'indubitables', the whole system must remain correct.
  • It's a nice car, but they are charging an 'exorbitant' price for it.
  • You also have to pay 'exorbitant' interest if you have credit card debt.
  • a 'biting' wind
  • a 'biting' criticism
  • a 'biting' insect
  • His 'frostbitten' toes would not recover.
  • A month ago the new smoking ban turned thousands of bar-room 'habitues' into reluctant exiles from their usual corner seat.
  • Ic [...] 'bitre' breostceare gebiden hæbbe. I have endured bitter heart-pain. (The Seafarer)
  • A quarter is two 'bits'.
  • A threepenny 'bit'.
  • There were 'bits' of paper all over the floor.
  • Does your leg still hurt? / Just a 'bit' now.
  • I'll be there in a 'bit', I need to take care of something first.
  • He was here just a 'bit' ago, but it looks like he's stepped out.
  • I'd like a big 'bit' of cake, please.
  • His 'bit' about video games was not nearly as entertaining as the other segments of his show.
  • That's a 'bit' too sweet.
  • Your dog 'bit' me!
  • The pioneers survived by eating the small game they could get; 'rabbits', squirrels and occasionally a raccoon.
  • The informant seemed skittish, as if he was about to 'rabbit'.
  • Stop your infernal 'rabbiting'! Use proper words or nobody will listen to you!
  • Commonly used in the form "to rabbit on"
  • It’s become a 'habit' of mine to have a cup of coffee after dinner.
  • By force of 'habit', he dressed for work even though it was holiday.
  • It’s interesting how Catholic and Buddhist monks both wear 'habits'.
  • The new riding 'habits' of the team looked smashing!.
  • He has a 10-cigar 'habit'.
  • The Moon's 'orbit' around the Earth takes nearly one month to complete.
  • In the post WWII era, several eastern European countries came into the 'orbit' of the Soviet Union.
  • The convenience store was a heavily travelled point in her daily 'orbit', as she purchased both cigarettes and lottery tickets there.
  • The Earth 'orbits' the Sun.
  • The harried mother had a cloud of children 'orbiting' her, asking for sweets.
  • A rocket was used to orbit the satellite
  • Their promise to lower taxes is clearly an election-year 'gambit'.
  • Her clever 'opening gambit' gave her an advantage.
  • We wish to show f is continuous. Arbitrate epsilon greater than zero...
  • He's a 'habitual' chainsmoker.
  • Her 'habitual' lying was the reason for my mistrust.
  • Professor Franklein took his 'habitual' seat at the conference table.
  • The wind was 'bitingly' cold.
  • He would eventually 'habituate' his use of opiates.
  • Louise and I used to head down to the coffee shop and just sit for hours and 'kibitz'.
  • Quit 'kibitzing'! You're giving away my hand!
  • She is known to be 'bitingly' sarcastic without provocation.
  • Not all dogs are 'biters'.
  • Her clever opening 'gambit' gave her an advantage.
  • Ann gossiped about me and mocked my work; sometimes she can be a real 'bitch'!
  • My dog has never 'bitten' anyone before.
  • Stop your infernal 'rabbitting'! Use proper words or nobody will listen to you!
  • There was an art 'exhibition' on in the town hall.
  • a boat 'exhibition'
  • Horses hate having 'bits' put in their mouth.
  • The break-up was very 'bittersweet', they both hurt to end it, but were glad it was over.
  • Il a souri quand j'ai mis la main entre ses cuisses et je me suis mis à frotter sa grosse 'bite'.
  • Crabb
  • 'Subito' Marcus currit per agros. - Suddenly, Marcus runs through the fields.
  • Some countries are more 'prohibitive' than others when it comes to hot topics like euthanasia and cloning.
  • I'd like to visit Europe someday, but the cost is 'prohibitive' right now.
  • Dude, don't be such a 'bitch'. Assert yourself.
  • Do you have to ask your man [or girl] before you do everything? You must be the 'bitch' in the relationship.
  • They can 'bite' me.
  • The 'ambition' of many Wiktionarians is a universal dictionary that renders translation a matter of merely looking up a phrase.
  • The break-up was very 'bittersweet'; they both hurt to end it, but were glad it was over.
  • To secure food safety, there should first be a national standard to arbitrarily state what is wholesome and what is not; second, the final buyer should know exactly what he is purchasing. ([http://books.google.com/books?id=sojNAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA9319#v=onepage&q&f=false The World's Work ...: a history of our time])
  • I have done my 'bit', I expect you to do yours.