To respond to one in an extremely angry and forceful manner that is often sudden or unprovoked. What's wrong with the boss today? I just tried to ask him a question, and he totally bit my head off!Hey, no need to bite my head off, I'm just trying to help!Ugh, whenever she's mad at her boyfriend, she ends up biting my head off instead.
Fig. to speak sharply and with great anger to someone. (Fixed order.) Don't bite my head off! Be patient.I'm very sorry I lost my tempter. I didn't mean to bite your head off.
Also, snap someone's head off. Scold or speak very angrily to someone, as in Ask her to step down from the board? She'd bite my head off! The first expression, dating from the mid-1900s, replaced the much earlier bite someone's nose off (16th century); the variant was first recorded in 1886.
If someone bites your head off or snaps your head off, they speak to you in an unpleasant, angry way, because they are annoyed about something. And don't bite my head off just because you're fed up!I don't know what's wrong with Julia but she snapped my head off just now.
To respond angrily to a moderate or harmless request or remark. It appears to have replaced two earlier versions, to bite someone’s nose off, which dates back to the sixteenth century (“She would . . . bite off a man’s nose with an answere,” Thomas Nashe, 1599), and to snap someone’s head off, current in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
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