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  1. Bitch (/ b ɪ t ʃ /) is a pejorative slang word for a person, usually a woman. When applied to a woman or girl, it means someone who is belligerent, unreasonable, malicious, controlling, aggressive, or dominant. When applied to a man or boy, bitch reverses its meaning and is a derogatory term for being subordinate, weak, or cowardly.

  2. BITCH definition: 1. a female dog 2. an offensive word for a woman who is considered to be unpleasant or unkind 3…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of BITCH is the female of the dog or some other carnivorous mammals. How to use bitch in a sentence.

  4. a man who willingly or unwillingly submits to the will and control of a dominant partner in a sexual relationship, especially with another man, as in prison bitch. a gay man who is penetrated in anal intercourse, or who assumes a submissive role in a sexual relationship.

  5. Bitch is a commonly used slang word that is nonetheless vulgar when you throw it at a woman or a man. The word originally meant, and still means, a female dog.

  6. Life's a bitch. [singular] bitch (about somebody/something) (informal) a complaint about somebody/something or a conversation in which you complain about them We've been having a bitch about our boss.

  7. 2 days ago · bitch (third-person singular simple present bitches, present participle bitching, simple past and past participle bitched) ( vulgar, intransitive) To behave or act as a bitch. ( vulgar, intransitive) To criticize spitefully, often for the sake of complaining rather than in order to have the problem corrected.

  8. BITCH definition: 1. an offensive name for an unpleasant woman 2. a female dog 3. to talk in an unkind way about…. Learn more.

  9. bitch in British English. (bɪtʃ ) noun. 1. a female dog or other female canine animal, such as a wolf. 2. derogatory, slang. a malicious, spiteful, or coarse woman. 3. offensive, slang. a woman.

  10. Origin of Bitch. From Middle English biche, bicche, from Old English biċċe, from Proto-Germanic *bikjǭ (compare Norwegian bikkja (“dog”), Old Danish bikke ), from *bikjaną (“to thrust, attack”) (compare Old Norse bikkja (“plunge into water”), Dutch bikken (“to hack”)). More at bicker. From Wiktionary.