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bitterly English

Meaning bitterly meaning

What does bitterly mean?

bitterly

with bitterness, in a resentful manner she complained bitterly indicating something hard to accept he was bitterly disappointed (= bitter) extremely and sharply it was bitterly cold bitter cold

Synonyms bitterly synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as bitterly?

Topics bitterly topics

What do people use bitterly to talk about?

Examples bitterly examples

How do I use bitterly in a sentence?

Simple sentences

They say that since it was bitterly cold in Northern Europe that winter, many people were frozen to death.
Yesterday I saw a man who was crying bitterly.
She wept bitterly.
She cried bitterly.
Nakamatsu smiled bitterly at his own stupid question.
Japanese and American forces were still fighting bitterly.
The winters were bitterly cold.
It was bitterly cold in Washington.
I was bitterly disappointed.
It was bitterly cold outside.
I am bitterly disappointed.
Many tears were shed for him, and little Gerda wept bitterly for a long time.
The princess did not like this at all, and one day she complained about it very bitterly to her nurse.
Yesterday I saw a man crying bitterly.
Tom cried bitterly.
Tom was bitterly disappointed.
He will repent bitterly for defying me.
I sat before the mirror and wept bitterly.

Movie subtitles

Even if you feel like you'll be so bitterly sad to part, but that it's human nature for that sorrow to keep you alive.
During the reign of king Johan III a bitterly cold winter swept over Sweden, the likes of which had never been seen in living memory.
But do they not often suffer bitterly?
He's like a child carried away suddenly and repenting bitterly.
Bitterly.
I regret bitterly, wished to have, last year when I have tried for theft that you have not only wrong crowd.
You see, she's bound to be insanely jealous at first, and she must resent you bitterly.
You know, she objected bitterly to my coming back to Holywell.
I want you to know that I am most bitterly sorry for my conduct.
He hates you most bitterly.
He's been bitterly poor all his life.
Cold, cruel, and bitterly jealous of Cinderella's charm and beauty, she was grimly determined to forward the interests of her own two awkward daughters.
Marcus, I once accused you bitterly.
Your fans will be bitterly disappointed.
Too bitterly branded for life you became by fate broken-winged, inhibited, self-conscious.
And so, with the flames of war crackling along a two-thousand mile front, troops bitterly needed to defend Russia played parade for the Czar.
Concerning this war, which we are bitterly waging. we promise..
Yes, I am. Bitterly.
With an empty stomach and wet clothes which are encrusted with mud and gunge we spend a bitterly cold night.
I say this frankly and bitterly because I do not wish to be a small-time chiseler.
We're bitterly sorry for Your Majesty's disappointment.
I wouldn't care if it was the day after. Of course I'd cry. I'd cry bitterly.
And you're against Santa Anna? - Bitterly.
You see, she's bound to be insanely jealous at first and she must resent you bitterly.
Otherwise, I'm afraid that you'll regret this bitterly all the rest of your life.
But I didn't know anything! I found her weeping bitterly in the garden.
I cannot tell if to depart in silence. or bitterly to speak in your reproof.
Believe me, those kind of people aren't like that, and if you don't intervene in good time you might regret it bitterly.
I'm bitterly disappointed.
A bitterly cold wind swept down from the north and set us shivering as we stumbled on.
Bitterly cold, Marco.
She had nothing to say, but complained bitterly.

News and current affairs

There is something bitterly ironic in this.
An already bad situation marked by deadlock and vitriol is likely to worsen, and the world should not expect much leadership from a bitterly divided United States.
One bitterly cold March day, I joined a few friends on a trip to the former camp.
Sadly, the ideological mouthpieces for the super-rich in the US, especially the editorial page of The Wall Street Journal, remain bitterly opposed to foreign aid, even if it's just 70 cents per hundred dollars of income!
But those who had expected that his visit would mainly be about the stalled negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians were bitterly disappointed.
In the long term, any crackdown on the Brotherhood would lead its members and supporters - already bitterly disappointed in democracy - to reject elections entirely.
Indeed, the dispatch of Japanese peacekeepers under UN command to Cambodia in 1992 (the first time the 240,000-strong SDF had ventured on a mission abroad) was bitterly contested.
Sullenly, bitterly, they are returning to their pits.
Did she create a new economic dynamism, or did she leave the United Kingdom bitterly divided, more unequal, and less cohesive than before?
Developing-country politicians and populations complain bitterly that the rich industrial countries are growing too much food.
There is something bitterly ironic in this. For America really is a land of liberty, a place where lives, often scarred by injustice elsewhere, can be remade.
Some Chinese, especially those who are not economically successful, harp bitterly on Japan's past depredations.
Most international business leaders bitterly oppose the austerity program that Merkel has imposed on the European Union.
Consider Iceland, which suffered bitterly following the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008.
All of them were strong internationalists when compared to the true isolationists of the 1930s, who bitterly opposed coming to the aid of Britain in WWII.

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