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Make correct pairs from two columns
PERFECT HITS | {{lyricTraining.stats.PERFECT_HITS}} | +{{lyricTraining.stats.PERFECT_HITS * 20}} |
HITS | {{lyricTraining.stats.HITS}} | +{{lyricTraining.stats.HITS * 10}} |
LONGEST STREAK | {{lyricTraining.stats.LONGEST_STREAKS}} | +{{lyricTraining.stats.LONGEST_STREAKS * 10}} |
REMAINING TIME | {{lyricTraining.timeout / 1000}}s | +{{lyricTraining.timeout / 1000}} |
TOTAL | +{{lyricTraining.exp}} |
How to use "bitter" in a sentence?
You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.
/SHärp/
(Of clothes) nicely or stylishly. precisely. Person's name. raise pitch of.
/ˈasəd/
containing acid or having properties of acid. substance with chemical properties including turning litmus red.
/ˈsou(ə)r/
Tasting like an acid. drink made by mixing spirit with lemon or lime juice. make or become sour.
/ˈbīdiNG/
Critical or mean, often in a witty, clever way. (E.g. of fish) to take bait and be caught.
You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.
/ˈwelkəm/
Being what was wanted or needed. used to greet someone in polite or friendly way. Friendly greeting to someone who has arrived. greet someone arriving in polite or friendly way.
/ˈbä(l)mē/
characterized by pleasantly warm weather. (Weather) calm and soothing.
The word "bitter" is an uncountable noun(mass noun).
Something that is painful or hard to accept, as in “Being fired from one’s f ...
Something that is painful or hard to accept, as in “Being fired from one’s first job is a bitter pill to swallow.” The term has been used figuratively for an unpleasant situation or fact since the sixteenth century. Horace Walpole had the precise locution: “It was a bitter pill for the King to swallow” (1779). On the other hand, the more philosophical view that bad-tasting medicine may be beneficial has existed alongside the cliché. “Bitter pills may have blessed effects” was recorded in James Kelly’s (1721), and Thomas Fuller put it as “wholesome effects” in (1732).
The last extremity; also, death or ruin. For example, , or . The source of t ...
The last extremity; also, death or ruin. For example, , or . The source of this term may have been nautical, a being a turn of a cable around posts, or , on a ship's deck, and the meaning "the part of the cable that stays inboard." Thus, when a rope is paid out to the bitter end, no more remains. [Mid-1800s]
An unwanted or unpleasant situation that someone is forced to accept. A shor ...
An unwanted or unpleasant situation that someone is forced to accept. A shortening of the phrase, "a bitter pill to swallow."
An unpleasant fact that one must accept
An unpleasant fact that one must accept
used to say that one will continue doing something until it is finished, no ...
used to say that one will continue doing something until it is finished, no matter what.