biscuit

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
11
Words With Friends
14
Letters
7
Pronunciation
/ˈbɪs.kɪt/
See all 11 pronunciations
/ˈbɪs.kɪt/ · /ˈbəs.kət/ · /bɪs.keʈ/ · [ˈbɪs.kë̞ʈ] · /bɪs.kɪʈ/ · [ˈbɪs.kɪʈ] · /bɪs.kʊʈ/ · [ˈbɪs.kʊʈ] · /bɪs.kəʈ/ · [ˈbɪs.kɐʈ] · /ˈbis.kwɪt/

Definition of biscuit

15 senses · 2 parts of speech · etymology included

noun

  1. (Australia, Canada, India, Ireland, New-Zealand, UK, countable, sometimes, uncommon, uncountable)A small, flat, baked good which is either hard and crisp or else soft but firm; a cookie.
    “Weighed myself at the gym and have hit 10st 8lb, a sure sign of things getting out of control—so I can’t even console myself with a chocolate biscuit.”
See all 15 definitions

noun

  1. (Australia, Canada, India, Ireland, New-Zealand, UK, countable, sometimes, uncommon, uncountable)A small, flat, baked good which is either hard and crisp or else soft but firm; a cookie.
    “Weighed myself at the gym and have hit 10st 8lb, a sure sign of things getting out of control—so I can’t even console myself with a chocolate biscuit.”
  2. (Canada, US, countable, rare, uncountable)A small, usually soft and flaky bread, generally made with baking soda, which is similar in texture to a scone but which is usually not sweet.
  3. (Ireland, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, UK, countable, uncountable)A cracker.
    “cheese and biscuits”
    “water biscuits”
    “digestive biscuits”
  4. (countable, especially, uncountable)Any of several hard bread or breadlike foodstuffs, especially those formerly supplied to naval ships and armies, made with very little water, kneaded into flat cakes, and slowly baked, and which often became infested with weevils.
    “Near-synonyms: tack, bread”
    “He was a long, earnest man, and though born on an icy coast, seemed well adapted to endure hot latitudes, his flesh being hard as twice-baked biscuit.”
  5. (countable, uncountable)A form of unglazed earthenware.
    “Charm'd by your touch, the kneaded clay refines, / The biscuit hardens, the enamel shines […].”
    “In 1740, Thomas Whieldon of Little Fenton made 'toys' in either the clay or biscuit state. They were coloured with zaffre, copper, manganese, etc. and glazed with black, red or white lead.”
    “An overfired biscuit has insufficient porosity for glazing.”
  6. (countable, uncountable)A light brown colour.
  7. (countable, uncountable)A thin oval wafer of wood or other material inserted into mating slots on pieces of material to be joined to provide gluing surface and strength in shear.
  8. (US, countable, slang, uncountable)A plastic card bearing the codes for authorizing a nuclear attack.
  9. (US, countable, slang, uncountable)A handgun, especially a revolver.
    “I shoot my biscuit in the air until the sky is gone”
  10. (countable, uncountable)A puck (hockey puck).
  11. (countable, slang, uncountable)The head.
    “Damn, damn, what they say about me? I don't know man, fuck is on your biscuit”
    “Me and my down ass nigga get twisted Nigga get to trippin', knock the gravy out your biscuit”
    “Henny right here, I'ma sip it You try me, it's shots at your biscuit”
    “[…] Risk it, you get slapped in your biscuit”
  12. (New-Zealand, countable, uncountable)An inner tube used in the sport of tubing, or biscuiting.
  13. (US, countable, slang, uncountable)A young woman.

verb

  1. (transitive)To fire (pottery) in a kiln, without a ceramic glaze.
  2. (New-Zealand, intransitive)To take part in the sport of tubing, riding down a river on an inner tube.

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

PIE word *dwóh₁ Etymology tree Proto-Indo-European *dwóh₁ Proto-Indo-European *dwís Proto-Italic *dwis Old Latin duis Early Medieval Latin bis Proto-Indo-European *pekʷ- Proto-Indo-European *-eti Proto-Indo-European *pékʷeti Proto-Italic *kʷekʷō Early Medieval Latin coquō…

See full etymology

PIE word *dwóh₁ Etymology tree Proto-Indo-European *dwóh₁ Proto-Indo-European *dwís Proto-Italic *dwis Old Latin duis Early Medieval Latin bis Proto-Indo-European *pekʷ- Proto-Indo-European *-eti Proto-Indo-European *pékʷeti Proto-Italic *kʷekʷō Early Medieval Latin coquō Early Medieval Latin coctus Early Medieval Latin biscoctus Old French bescuitbor. Middle English bisquyte English biscuit From earlier bisket, from Middle English bisquyte, from Old French bescuit (French biscuit); doublet of biscotto.

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