The phrase is an idiom referring to a dog that is too sorry to hunt.
And to put the definition into NON-slang terms, it means a dog that will not or cannot do the job of hunting, but has to be fed human food (like biscuits) to survive.
It was a derogatory term used [by pirates] to describe a bastard son of a sailor.
Wouldn't have thought there'd be any. Antonym means "the opposite of"; what's the opposite of a biscuit? Not the same as an alternative, and doesn't mean "not a". Cakes, doughnuts, muffins, bagels and shortbread are not antonyms for biscuit; nor are albatross, coal, sausage, handbag and pterodactyl.
There is no adjective for the noun biscuit. The noun is often used as a noun adjunct (e.g. biscuit dough).
The u is silent in biscuit.
42 42 564 the numbers by them selves mean nothing really but when said out loud it sounds like "Shini Shini Goroshi" literally meaning "Die Die Kill" (In the anime "Soul Eater" it's the number used to call Death)
The Biscuit Eater was created on 1972-03-22.
The Biscuit Eater - 1972 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G Iceland:L USA:G
It was a derogatory term used [by pirates] to describe a bastard son of a sailor.
The Biscuit Eater - 1940 is rated/received certificates of: USA:Passed (National Board of Review) USA:Approved (PCA #5841)
Disneyland - 1954 The Biscuit Eater Part 1 23-3 was released on: USA: 10 October 1976
Disneyland - 1954 The Biscuit Eater Part 2 23-4 was released on: USA: 17 October 1976
Nothing. That's like asking what's the "th" mean in "the". Or more appropriately, like asking, "What does cuit in biscuit mean?" Nothing, sometimes a biscuit is just a biscuit.
German Wirehaired Pointer
I believe it was "The Biscuit Eater."
It was set in the 1940's. The 1972 version was a remake of a 1940 version.
Biscuit
it means cake