In British English, "biscuit" refers to a sweet baked good, typically crisp and often enjoyed with tea or coffee. In contrast, American English uses the term "biscuit" to describe a soft, flaky bread roll, often served with savory dishes like fried chicken or gravy. Thus, the two terms refer to very different types of food across the Atlantic.
What the Americans call "cookie", the British call "biscuit".I had a rabbit called Biscuit.he dipped the biscuit in his tea.That really takes the biscuit. (British idiom meaning that you find something that has occurred to be annoying or surprising).
A biscuit is known as a 'cookie' in the United States
A biscuit that can be cooked at home is a cookie In Britain it's mostly 'biscuits', in North America, it's mostly 'cookies'. As a Briton, I had not heard of cookies until the age of ten, when I visited my cousins in Canada.
A digestive biscuit is a type of British cookie which is semi-sweet. They are called that because it was once believed that they aided digestion. If you "go down for a digestive biscuit," you would be going downstairs for a type of cookie to eat.
America
The nation's first biscuit mix came out in the 1920s
To die.
Biscuit
it means cake
Cookie
a huge biscuit
Cute and little.