Dictionaries:

bit:

1. A girl or woman . A term of appreciation no longer appreciated by women.

Quote: John Houseman about Jacqueline Bisset in St. Ives (1976); ' Nice bit, that .'

2. Or: downy-bit / hairy-bit , the female genitals . Chiefly British usage. See vagina for synonyms.

3. Or: downy-bit / hairy-bit , a woman regarded as a sex-object . Like ' piece , this word implies that a woman is a hole , and less than whole .

4. Or: merry-bit / warm-bit / willing-bit , a woman perceived as sexually obliging, hence promiscuous .

5. Or: the bit / having-a-bit , (to have) sexual-intercourse . See copulation for synonyms.

Quote: Fella (Jerry Lewis) and his Fairy Godfather (Ed Wynn) watching Maximilian dance with Princess Charming in Cinderfella (1960):
-- Fella: ' Isn't he holding my future wife a little too close? '
-- Fairy: ' Stop worrying! She's all yours, every bit of her .'
-- Fella: ' Yeah, but I'd like to have the bits he's holding .'


See Also: a bit of all right, a bit of alright, a bit of beef, a bit of crumpet, a bit of fun, a bit of nifty, a bit of nookey, a bit of rumpty-tumpty, a bit of rumpy-bumpy, a bit of rumpy-pumpy, a bit of stiff, a bit of stuff, a bit on the side, a piece of stuff, alright, anaclisis, anaclitism, autophagy, bark, bdsm, best piece, bit, bit of all right, bit of alright, bit of fluff, bit of nifty, bit of nookey, bit of rumpty-tumpty, bit of rumpy-bumpy, bit of rumpy-pumpy, bit of stiff, bit on the fork, bit on the side, bite, bite me!, bite my weinie, Bite of the Boar, bite the crank, biting, biting daddy, biting dog, biting kiss, bits and pieces, bitten, blood sports, blow me!, bollocks, bouncy-bouncy, brank, Broken Cloud, bum crumbs, bumtags, cat-fighting, cheek bite, chug nuts, chunk, clagnuts, clamp it silly, coco-pops, crackling, crumpet, dags, dangleberries, dermagraphism, dillberries, dingleberries, do a nifty, fab, far gone, fartleberries, fluff, food metaphor, fork, get a crumpet, grostulation, hard hit, have a bit of crumpet, have a bit of fork, have a bit on the fork, heck bite, hecklace, hickey, Hidden Bite, hole it, jam, juicy, kiss bite, kissonyms, kling-ons, Line of Jewels, love bite, molly, monkey bite, monogamous, monogamy, movie rating system, navy cake, nifty, peach, piece of skirt, piece of stuff, pink flaps, pintle-fancier, pintle-maid, pintle-merchant, pintle-monger, pintle-ranger, pintle-twister, Purple Heart, rude parts, rumpty-tumpty, rumpy-bumpy, rumpy-pumpy, scarf (up), scolds bridle, self-cannibalism, shag tags, shit on a stick, skirt, slap and tickle, sloppy seconds, snap it, snapping pussy, snapping turtle, spank, strawberry kiss, suckers, switched-on, Swollen Bite, three-penny bits, thrupenny bits, tib, tidbits, tit, tit-bit, tit-bits, titbit(s), tray bits, trey bits, vampire, vampire sex, vampirism, willing tit, wilnots, wilnuts, winnets, winnits

Quotes Containing bit:
Toby (Joan Hacket) and Georgia (Marsha Mason) in Only When I Laugh (1981): ''Nothing in life happens without warning. It falls apart, day by day, bit by bit . Like your face in the mirror.''
Sam Lester (Matthew Broderick) in The Night We Never Met (1993): 'Sex is a little bit like politics; the incumbent always has the advantage.'
Tira (Mae West) in I''m No Angel (1933): ''I''m no angel but I''ve spread my wings a bit .''
Kris Kringle''s (Edmund Gwenn) age in Miracle on 34th Street (1947): ''As old as my tongue and a little bit older than my teeth .''
Tira (Mae West) in I''m No Angel (1933): ''I''m no angel but I''ve spread my wings a bit .''
Tira (Mae West) in I''m No Angel (1933): ''I''m no angel but I''ve spread my wings a bit .''
Stephen Blume (George Segal) in Blume in Love (1973): 'You see two people in-love somehow you feel a little bit of it yourself.'
Stephen Blume (George Segal) in Blume in Love (1973): 'You see two people in-love somehow you feel a little bit of it yourself.'
Forrest Gump (Tom Hanks) about the thing 'That jumped up and bit you' in Vietnam in Forrest Gump (1994): 'Hit me directly in the buttocks . They said it was a million dollar wound , but the army must keep that money because I still ain't seen a nickel of that million dollars.'
Chief Inspector Dreyfus (Herbert Lom) to Jacques Clouseau (Peter Sellers) in A Shot in the Dark (1964).''I hate you! Every little bit of you!''
A journalist (Michael O''Keefe) and Nina (Laura San Giacomo) in Nina Takes a Lover (1995): - Journalist: ''There are basically two arguments about infidelity . One is that you''re either born monogamous or you''re not and the other is that we''re all capable, certain conditions in a marriage provoke it .'' - Nina: ''What do you think?'' - Journalist: ''I think it''s a little bit of both.''
Thief and con man William Shaw (Matthew Modine) dancing with a richly bejewelled lady in Cutthroat Island (1995) - Shaw: 'I'm a medical man , a doctor.' - Lady: 'Oh, my! (...) With higher anatomy you must know a great deal about the human body.' - Shaw: 'Indeed, madam . Every bit of it . All the ins and outs. In medecine it is our obligation to probe to the very bottom of things. '
The journalist (Michael O''Keefe) and Nina (Laura San Giacomo) in Nina Takes a Lover (1995): - Journalist: ''There are basically two arguments about infidelity . One is that you''re either born monogamous or you''re not and the other is that we''re all capable, certain conditions in a marriage provoke it .'' - Nina: ''What do you think?'' - Journalist: ''I think it''s a little bit of both.''
Huntley Haverstock/John Jones (Joel McCrea) to Carol Fisher (Laraine Day) in Foreign Correspondent (1940). - Johnny Jones: ''I''m in-love-with you, and I want to marry you.'' - Carol Fisher: ''I''m in-love-with you, and I want to marry you.'' - Johnny Jones: ''Hmm... That cuts down our love-scene quite a bit , doesn''t it?''
Murray (Jason Robards) to Sandra (Barbara Harris) in A Thousand Clowns (1965): - Murray Burns: 'Will you marry me?' - Sandra Moskowitz: 'What!?' - Murray Burns: 'Just a bit of shock treatment there. I have found, after long experience, it's the quickest way to get a woman's attention when her mind wanders. Always works. '
A journalist (Michael O''Keefe) and Nina (Laura San Giacomo) in Nina Takes a Lover (1995): - Journalist: ''There are basically two arguments about infidelity . One is that you''re either born monogamous or you''re not and the other is that we''re all capable, certain conditions in a marriage provoke it .'' - Nina: ''What do you think?'' - Journalist: ''I think it''s a little bit of both.''
Ira Skitch (Will Rogers) to his son-in-law in Mr. Skitch (1933): 'A wife is a wonderful thing and no husband should be without one. Now, Harvey, I'm gonna give you a bit of advice from an old veteran husband to an amateur . The most dangerous year in married life is the first , then comes the second, and the third, and the fourth, and on down . Marriage is an institution. I've been an inmate of that institution long enough to know that the most successful marriage in one where the wife is the boss and don't know it .'
Ira Skitch (Will Rogers) to his son-in-law in Mr. Skitch (1933): 'A wife is a wonderful thing and no husband should be without one. Now, Harvey, I'm gonna give you a bit of advice from an old veteran husband to an amateur . The most dangerous year in married life is the first , then comes the second, and the third, and the fourth, and on down . Marriage is an institution. I've been an inmate of that institution long enough to know that the most successful marriage in one where the wife is the boss and don't know it .'


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