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Discover LudwigThe phrase "awfully bitter" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that is extremely bitter in taste or to express a strong negative emotion, such as resentment or disappointment.
Example: "After the argument, she felt awfully bitter about how things had turned out between them."
Alternatives: "extremely bitter" or "very bitter".
Exact(2)
In her brilliant song "Four Women", recorded in 1965, Simone sings about four very different black women, one who lives "Between two worlds", another who says: "I'm awfully bitter these days because my parents were slaves..."...
Allowing Lieberman to retain control of a committee where he has done nothing but suppress meaningful oversight is going to be an awfully bitter pill to swallow when we're told that the price of "change" we all thought we were voting for is going to be too high.
Similar(58)
The main one -- and it's a dish-killer -- is that caramelizing can come awfully close to burning, and once you've scorched the onions there's no way to get rid of that bitter flavor but to dump them out, wipe the pan clean and start over.
Awfully quick.
Awfully good.
That looks awfully different.
It sounded awfully familiar.
It was awfully high, but awfully lonesome.
And looking awfully multidimensional.
That sounds awfully convenient.
It sounds awfully glamorous.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com