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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a bitter man" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe someone who harbors resentment or anger, often due to past experiences or disappointments.
Example: "After years of betrayal, he became a bitter man, unable to trust anyone again."
Alternatives: "an angry man" or "a resentful man".
Exact(32)
He wasn't a bitter man".
I am not a bitter man.
In 1994, a bitter man, Solzhenitsyn moved back to Russia.
A bitter man, he left Germany in 1950 to visit his daughter, Countess Zichy, in Argentina.
Columbus died on May 20 , 1506 by all accounts a bitter man.
"I'm not a bitter man," he says, "I'm a positive person.
Similar(28)
In the past, Mr. Updike's efforts to write from a woman's point of view tended to result in heroines who were little more than caricatures: all three "Witches of Eastwick" were laughable parodies of feminism, while the heroine of "S" was a bitter man-hater who put her own selfish whims before her family.
Throw in some verbal and emotional abuse, the kind that breaks down your self-esteem and sets you on the path to co-dependency and substance abuse, and you've got yourself the perfect recipe for becoming a bitter man-hater.
I may be a sad, bitter man but at least CG has an icon!
In the words of one infamous Daily Mail column, "Grant has become a lonely, bitter man consumed with hatred of the media who helped make him a star..
"Obviously it would be a very bitter man who suggested that the FA hated Leeds.
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