bitched
English
    
    Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /bɪtʃt/
Etymology 2
    
From Middle English bicched, equivalent to bitch + -ed.
Adjective
    
bitched (comparative more bitched, superlative most bitched)
- (archaic, literary) Wretched; vile; accursed; damned
-  1934, Geoffrey Chaucer, John Urban Nicholson, Canterbury tales, rendered into modern English, page 302:- Such is the whelping of the bitched bones two: Perjury, anger, cheating, homicide.
 
 
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- (vulgar) Causing difficulty; nasty; unpleasant; problematic; (intensifier) damned, bloody
-  2004, Bernard Capp, When Gossips Meet:- A Sussex villager told his friends that Elizabeth Best was a 'bitched whore', and offered a shilling to anyone who would drive his cart to her door and say, 'Dame, here is a cart load of whores'.
 
-  2005, Sean Barry, John Barry, What A Zoo!:- For example, she fought a bitched battle with the Condorloser, although she, the Boxer, was eventually vanquished.
 
-  2007, Nicholas Ashby, Time Pips, page 118:- Sully took a look and diagnosed a bitched spring, but said he could make a temporary repair.
 
-  2010, William Alexander Patterson, 4th, The City Is served Bartholomew! to the American Prison!:- Let us renounce the dichotomies of the bitched mandarins.
 
 
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