[
UK
/bˈaɪtɪŋli/
]
ADVERB
-
extremely and sharply
bitter cold
it was bitterly cold
bitter cold
How To Use bitingly In A Sentence
- It was hard not to notice that Axelrod's response echoes a memorable, bitingly sarcastic line from a Clinton campaign swing through Rhode Island in March 2008. White House Rhetoric On Bipartisanship Echoes Clinton's In 2008
- On a bitingly cold January afternoon it was hard to imagine a sunny June 2004 day when Moore Street Plaza becomes a resplendent showcase of downtown Dublin.
- His voice became dangerously hard and bitingly accusatorial. At The Spaniard's Convenience
- Or, more bitingly, “You go around kneecapping people???” The Volokh Conspiracy » “Handicapper”
- ‘But I did’, she said, a bitingly anxious tone lancing her own thoughts.
- It was only a minute, and it was reasonably civil in a bitingly snappy sort of way, but nonetheless. Eva Norlyk Smith, Ph.D.: The Secret Behind THE SECRET: Who Gets to Tell Your Story?
- Rental cars charlotte awhile for the swarthiness the apprehension of any azalea he has apraxic in a unmalleability or negligence anapsid, we are rectilineal at, bitingly, an nutrient huckster. Rational Review
- Jose Guadalupe Posada (1852-1913) popularized Mexico's life of the dead in bitingly satiric, mass-produced etchings and lithographs that have enthralled Mexicans for generations. Dia de los Muertos: the dead come to life in Mexican folk art
- One of the funniest and most bitingly accurate parts of "Bobos in Paradise" was Brooks's analysis of the New York Times's wedding announcements. The tea party warns of a New Elite. They're right.
- He caught a feeling of chumminess, though at the same time he was bitingly aware that it was very much of a woman who embraced him in that comradely smile. THE STAMPEDE TO SQUAW CREEK