Do we say bight or bite

bight 185 occurrences

The captain stood at the break of the deck, a few feet from him, and a little raised, so as to have a swing at him, and held in his hand the bight of a thick, strong rope.

Lake N. land covered with water, gulf, gulph^, bay, inlet, bight, estuary, arm of the sea, bayou

Our village lies near the centre of Moonfleet Bay, a great bight twenty miles across, and a death-trap to up-channel sailors in a south-westerly gale.

There are four principal islands in the Gulf of Guinea, or Bight of Biafra, as it is usually called by English navigators, Ferdinand Poo, Princes isle, St Thomas, and Annobon, the discovery of which have been related as follows by Barbot, and his account seems the most probable.

The following day was spent in examining a bight, but we were prevented from penetrating to the bottom by the shoalness of the water.

The bight is fronted by a crowded range of sandy islets, from which we did not extricate ourselves until the next day.

At daylight we left this anchorage, and proceeded to penetrate to the eastward towards a deep bight or strait; the wind was, however, so light, that we were compelled to anchor until the sea-breeze set in, when the vessel was again under sail, and proceeded onwards.

Up and on we panted, Jane partly supported by having the bight of the shikari's puggaree round her waist while he towed her by the ends.

The extreme point of this bight is the eastern head of LIVERPOOL RIVER, whose entrance is to the westward of Haul-round Islet; which, as well as Entrance Island, is connected to the above point by a shoal.

LAGRANGE BAY, to the east of Cape Bossut, is a bight, the bottom of which was not seen.

Thirty miles South-West by South from Cape Preston is a mangrove bight, with several openings communicating with a large lagoon, or body of water, at the base of a small range of hills.

The bight is shoal and thickly studded with sandy islets.

A ship steering along this coast to the eastward, bound to Port Jackson through Torres Strait, should steer upon the parallel of 41 degrees, to avoid being thrown into the bight to the west of Cape Northumberland, where with a South-East wind, that would otherwise be fair for carrying her through Bass Strait, she would be detained probably a week.

The western shore of the Gulf of Carpentaria is somewhat higher, and from Limmen's Bight to the latitude of Groote Eylandt, is lined by a range of low hills.

The general range of the coast, it will be observed, from Limmen's Bight to Cape Arnhem, is from south-west to north-east; and three conspicuous ranges of islands on the north-western entrance of the Gulf of Carpentaria, the appearance of which is so remarkable as to have attracted the attention of Captain Flinders,* have the same general direction: a fact which is probably not unconnected with the general structure of the country.

The rite of circumcision, for instance, is only performed at King's Sound, on the west side of the Gulf of Carpentaria, and near the head of the Australian bight on the south.

Next morning we moved the ship three miles further up into a bight on the east side from which Endeavour Hill bore West 13 South two miles and a half.

" After a pause of about three minutes, giving the boys time to seat themselves, and the screams, mutterings, and laughter of the rest of the audience to die away, Tiffles said: "Now, ladies and gentlemen, I will introduce you to sunrise, in the Bight of Benin.

"Oh! no, sir; it is the Bight of Benin; and I must say, though, perhaps, I am too partial, that Ceccarini never did a better thing.

From the Bight of Benin, the voyaging spectators took an excursion up the river.

The larboard stays of the foremast snapped first; then the shrouds on the same side doubled in a great bight and parted; next the mast, with a loud, shrieking crash, splintered and went by the board.

Owing to the rising and falling of the mast, the hawser now tautened with a jerk which flung the voyager up against it or even over it, and now drooped in a large bight which let him down into the seethe of water and foam that had just rushed over the vessel, forcing it down on its beam ends.

BHUTAN (20), an independent state in the Eastern Himalayas, with magnificent scenery; subsidised by Britain; has a government like that of Thibet; religion the same, though the people are at a low stage of civilisation; the country exports horses, musk, and salt. BIAF`RA, BIGHT OF, a large bay in the Gulf of Guinea, in W. Africa

A portion of this is unquestionably the land seen by Captain Bligh in 1792but in addition detached portions of the shores of the great bight of the south-east coast were seen, as in the neighbourhood of Freshwater Bay and elsewhere.

Tacking inshore we found a small bight, with shoal water, on a bank of mud extending right across, beyond which the entrance of a creek fringed with mangroves was discovered.

bite 1480 occurrences

But the citizens of the twice-conquered town bite their lips, turn their heads aside, and pretend indifference.

"You grudge us a little shade, eh, even to eat a bite?" said the American.

"Go in an' get a bite an' a drink," said Anderson to the driver.

"No more than the bite of a harmless snake in the grass.

Mrs. Crocks' words seemed to darken the sun, and put the bite of sharp ice in the gentle spring breeze.

One dreamed of running away and being chased by a dog with a hat on his head, who barked "Good-night" as fiercely as a bite.

"I know what I'll do; I'll go down cellar; that's where the rats stay; and if I am bad, I hope I'm as good as a rat, for I don't bite.

"I didn't bite him!"

"She ain't going to bite you," said Harry Campbell.

Glass in hand, never losing a bite, he had already persuaded his customer, by the time the roast arrived, to order not only the new thresher but also a mowing machine.

But yet 'tis pity that they let them pass, And like a common bite the Muse's grass.

He saw his questioner's frown, saw him even bite his lip as though conscious of having said a tactless thing.

But my fingers began to sting with the intense cold, and I had to bite them hard to keep from crying.

," said Anthea, giving her pen a vicious bite, "I don't believe he ever was; he is always sohatefully placid, and deliberate!"

Part of the meat and bread received at supper time was saved for the "morning bite."

The slaves never had any breakfast, but went to the field at daylight and after working till the sun was well up, all would stop for their morning bite.

Very often some young fellow ate his morning bite the evening before at supper and would have nothing for the morning, going without eating until noon.

The stop for morning bite was very short; then all would plunge into work until mid-day, when all hands were summoned to their principal meal.

We had nothing to wear but what we had on, and not much of that, so had small space for carrying anything, and, therefore, had brought with us only a little bite to eat.

Dr. Dandridge was just riding up, and seeing what was happening, yelled out to Williams: "I thought your dogs didn't bite.

"You young fool, you shall bite the dust, you and hundreds of thousands of your cowardly fellows, when the German flag flies from Buckingham Palace.

[* Bit, bite.]

Perhaps there might be a question between the old English again-rising and resurrection; but there can be no doubt that conscience is better than inwit, and remorse than again-bite.

Andy could hardly eat a bite of breakfast, for the eagerness that possessed his soul.

" "Anything can be innocent that sparkles to betray, that charms at first, but later will bite like an adder and sting like a serpent.

Do we say   bight   or  bite