What does this one mean?
Posted by Marian on December 05, 2001
In Reply to: What does this one mean? posted by Marian on December 05, 2001
: : I'm waiting with batted breath?
: I believe it's "baited breath." No, I take that back. The Merriam-Webster Dictionary of English Usage has this in its entry:
baited,
bated--Heritage 1982 and Bryson 1984 point out that in the phrase "with bated
breath," the _bated_ is sometimes misspelled _baited_:
...we wait and wait
with baited breath--N.Y. Times,15 June 1980
Bryson has an example from a British
newspaper.
The verb _bate_is related to abate.
My old Webster's Third New
International Dictionary says that the first meaning of "bate" is to reduce
the force or intensity of, or to moderate, or restrain. The example given is "he
_bated_ his breath."
I take all this to mean that one who is waiting with bated
breath is figuratively HOLDING his breath with, I imagine, anticipation.
- What does this one mean? James Briggs 12/05/01