biture
common noun
Syllable Decomposition
biturerather than from Old French boiture ("drunkenness, binge"), from bitte with the suffix -ure. The meaning "drunkenness" probably comes from the jargon of the marine making reference to stops. The naval term lovage in biture ("to coil a line or chain in figure-eights to avoid forming turns"), also makes possible an analogy with the gait of a drunken person.
Definitions
- marine
Plural
bitures
Translations
german:Rausch
See also
bitture (cn.) bitures (v.)