Word Meanings - BITTERLY - Book Publishers vocabulary database
In a bitter manner.
Related words: (words related to BITTERLY)
- BITTERWEED
A species of Ambrosia ; Roman worm wood. Gray. - BITTERSWEET
Sweet and then bitter or bitter and then sweet; esp. sweet with a bitter after taste; hence , pleasant but painful. - BITTERS
A liquor, generally spirituous in which a bitter herb, leaf, or root is steeped. - BITTERBUMP
the butterbump or bittern. - BITTERWORT
The yellow gentian , which has a very bitter taste. - MANNERIST
One addicted to mannerism; a person who, in action, bearing, or treatment, carries characteristic peculiarities to excess. See citation under Mannerism. - BITTERLY
In a bitter manner. - MANNERISM
Adherence to a peculiar style or manner; a characteristic mode of action, bearing, or treatment, carried to excess, especially in literature or art. Mannerism is pardonable,and is sometimes even agreeable, when the manner, though vicious, is natural - BITTERWOOD
A West Indian tree from the wood of which the bitter drug Jamaica quassia is obtained. - BITTERISH
Somewhat bitter. Goldsmith. - BITTERN
1. The brine which remains in salt works after the salt is concreted, having a bitter taste from the chloride of magnesium which it contains. 2. A very bitter compound of quassia, cocculus Indicus, etc., used by fraudulent brewers in adulterating - BITTERFUL
Full of bitterness. - BITTER
AA turn of the cable which is round the bitts. Bitter end, that part of a cable which is abaft the bitts, and so within board, when the ship rides at anchor. - BITTER SPAR
A common name of dolomite; -- so called because it contains magnesia, the soluble salts of which are bitter. See Dolomite. - BITTERNUT
The swamp hickory . Its thin-shelled nuts are bitter. - BITTERROOT
A plant allied to the purslane, but with fleshy, farinaceous roots, growing in the mountains of Idaho, Montana, etc. It gives the name to the Bitter Root mountains and river. The Indians call both the plant and the river Spæt'lum. - BITTERNESS
1. The quality or state of being bitter, sharp, or acrid, in either a literal or figurative sense; implacableness; resentfulness; severity; keenness of reproach or sarcasm; deep distress, grief, or vexation of mind. The lip that curls - BITTERLING
A roachlike European fish . - MANNERLINESS
The quality or state of being mannerly; civility; complaisance. Sir M. Hale. - MANNERED
1. Having a certain way, esp a. polite way, of carrying and conducting one's self. Give her princely training, that she may be Mannered as she is born. Shak. 2. Affected with mannerism; marked by excess of some characteristic peculiarity. His style - IMBITTER
To make bitter; hence, to make distressing or more distressing; to make sad, morose, sour, or malignant. Is there anything that more imbitters the enjoyment of this life than shame South. Imbittered against each other by former contests. Bancroft. - UNMANNERLY
Not mannerly; ill-bred; rude. -- adv. - IMBITTERMENT
The act of imbittering; bitter feeling; embitterment. - OVERMANNER
In an excessive manner; excessively. Wiclif. - ILL-MANNERED
Impolite; rude. - DISEMBITTER
To free from - EMBITTERMENT
The act of embittering; also, that which embitters.