She says a lot more than she does, so if you are intimidated, you have no reason to be
It means to get smething to eat quickly. It is usually used when one is in a rush
A person says "bite your tongue" to someone else when they feel the person has something they shouldn't. Bite your tongue means to quit talking -- You've said something you shouldn't have said.
In my opinion it means don't say anything if you aren't going to do something about it
The noun 'bite' is a concrete noun, a word for a physical action or a physical thing. However, the noun 'bite' can be used in an abstract context, for example, "His bark is worse than his bite.", and to quote McGruff the Crime Dog, "Help take a bite out of crime!"
Your words are worse(i.e. stronger) than your action, that the person talks tougher than he really is , that a person never carries out the threats that he makes.It means she yells and screams but isn't much of a danger.
This is not an idiom. The idiom is "her BARK is worse than her bite" which is a dog reference meaning that she and the dog make a lot of noise but aren't really dangerous. This sentence seems to mean that she has an injured shoulder which is worse than a bite that she also has.
It can mean someone is very threatening, but don't carry out their threats. They may seem very intimidating, but they are not as bad as they seem. So as they are just threatening and won't carry out their threat, then there is not much to worry about.
It can mean someone is very threatening, but don't carry out their threats. They may seem very intimidating, but they are not as bad as they seem. So as they are just threatening and won't carry out their threat, then there is not much to worry about.
grab a bite
A bite of the cherry is an idiom for a chance or attempt at something.
Nothing.It is "Her BARK is worse than her bite." This refers to a dog, saying that they may have a scary bark, but they don't actually bite people. For a person, this would refer to someone with a sharp tongue but who doesn't actually resort to violence or other severe punishment.
Its' (a dog) bark is often worse than its' bite.
It's a very old Scottish/Irish way of saying "I bet you can't back up all that s*** you're talking."
It's short for "get a bite to eat" - it means to go have something to eat.
Let's meet at a restaurant and get a bite to eat.
There is no way to say that. It is an English idiom.
To take an unhappy decision or result and deal with it resolutely