student asking question

What does it mean by "your bark is much worse than your bite"?

teacher

Native speaker’s answer

Rebecca

If you use the idiom that someone's "bark is worse than their bite", you mean that they seem much more unpleasant or hostile than they actually are in reality. Most often a dog's bark is used as a warning and the animal is not planning to attack or bite someone. That is where the idiom comes from. Ex: My girlfriend told me her father’s bark is worse than his bite and not to worry when I meet him this weekend. Ex: My professor seemed really mean when I first met him, but now I realise that his bark is worse than his bite.

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