A versatile piece of informal American English with two main uses. As a transitive verb, to bitch off someone means to annoy, irritate, or irk them — to get on their nerves. As an intransitive verb, it means to gripe, moan, or criticize something at length. The phrase captures that particular flavor of chronic complaining that goes beyond one-off venting into sustained, aggravating grievance. You can bitch off your coworkers by complaining nonstop, or your boss can bitch you off with constant micromanagement.
She really bitched off the whole team by forwarding every minor complaint to upper management.
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(intransitive, US) To complain or criticise.
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(transitive) To annoy or irk.
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