Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"bitterly" Definitions
  1. in a way that shows that you feel sad or angry
  2. (describing unpleasant or sad feelings) extremely
  3. bitterly cold very cold

947 Sentences With "bitterly"

How to use bitterly in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "bitterly" and check conjugation/comparative form for "bitterly". Mastering all the usages of "bitterly" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Bitterly polarized Turkey is a bitterly and sadly polarized country.
"I am bitterly bitterly disappointed that he's done that," said Dubs, speaking before Corbyn at the event in London.
Many ranchers bitterly complained about the federal land management agencies.
For two seasons, they battled bitterly for players and fans.
The U.S. isn't the only country bitterly debating public monuments.
On the first day of the event, we fought bitterly.
"These attacks are good for the government," he says bitterly.
Yet the EPRDF is bitterly at odds over the succession.
"We were the redheaded, bucktoothed stepchild," Mr. Sholle said bitterly.
"It's great that they want it," he said, laughing bitterly.
And my daddy's parents were bitterly opposed to their relationship.
Both companies described the result as bitterly disappointing on Monday.
I bitterly watched my friends ride off, leaving me behind.
And its elegiac tone omits Mr. Roth's bitterly sarcastic humor.
At the time, Southern segregationists bitterly upset about Brown v.
"Bitterly disappointed by initial Bombardier ruling," May said on Twitter.
Much like the nation as whole, Washington is bitterly polarized.
The fact that Congress is bitterly divided is not news.
The scrutiny now on him struck her as bitterly unjust.
It also plants a bitterly troubled assassin in the crowd.
Israeli officials reacted bitterly to the cancellation of the game.
They argued bitterly, prompting Isaiah to move in with classmates.
But both lawmakers have struggled in a bitterly divided Washington.
Americans fight bitterly about everything from gun control to Obamacare.
"We were the redheaded, bucktoothed stepchild," Mr. Sholle said bitterly.
But China responded bitterly to her call to Mr. Trump.
Oh, but this was a fine joke, he thought bitterly.
Industrial users complained bitterly of being unable to buy sugar.
Republicans have bitterly criticized Democrats' use of the nuclear option.
I remember this overwhelming silence and just being bitterly cold.
"All the great I got get diminished," Pharus complains bitterly.
The Turkey over which Mr Erdogan now presides remains bitterly divided.
Widodo only narrowly defeated Subianto in a bitterly fought 2014 election.
Brace yourself for a fascinating and bitterly fought Senate confirmation hearing.
We're bitterly divided in ways that aren't good for the country.
The two men have sparred bitterly since the transfer of power.
That marriage lasted five years, only to end bitterly in 1993.
Less than a decade later, they broke, bitterly and for life.
Here's where, in the bitterly polarized Senate, things could get sticky.
He suspected that the race would be bitterly contested, and expensive.
Jeb Bush, who bitterly fought Trump in the GOP presidential primaries.
The Trump team is bitterly divided over what's happening with China.
Trump is inheriting a healthy economy, but a bitterly divided nation.
But in this bitterly divided time, politics even intrudes on baseball.
"Macerata, in that moment, almost required it," the mayor said bitterly.
But to some Arizona liberals, Ms. Sinema's pragmatism is bitterly disappointing.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. left America shattered and bitterly divided.
Or that the country is bitterly divided over Mr. Trump's leadership.
And are those long stretches of militaristic-sounding marches bitterly ironic?
Many estranged former partners, however, have complained bitterly about the program.
The Formula One rivals Lewis Hamilton and Sebastian Vettel clashed bitterly.
But in this bitterly fought presidential race, controversy must be manufactured.
But elsewhere in Iraq and Syria many Sunnis bitterly oppose ISIS .
Meanwhile, there is a bitterly competitive primary on the Democratic side.
The night of March 5, 1770, was bitterly cold in Boston.
The thought of that made her cry bitterly, unable to forgive them.
FEW topics are as bitterly contested today as the nature of Islam.
I'm bitterly disappointed that they couldn't come up with a better plan.
And yet for millennials in particular, Brad and Angie's divorce stings bitterly.
The internet is bitterly divided over the Great Floral Fracas of 2019.
Past conversations between the bitterly polarized opponents have led to little progress.
Long after the cameras have moved on, London's legacy remains bitterly contested.
Sanchez works year-round, even through Chicago's bitterly cold winters, she said.
Bitterly opposed to Assad, the Turkish government has long supported Syrian rebels.
Residents are bitterly divided over his decision to reopen Naraha, Miyuki explains.
In the end we all just give up and start saving, bitterly.
Many of the rest remain sceptical or even bitterly opposed to him.
Political parties in Northern Ireland are predictably bitterly divided on the issue.
In this regard, little can be expected of a bitterly divided Congress.
MORE. McSally lost a bitterly fought Senate race in November against Sen.
At one point, Cynthia speaks bitterly about her mother, who killed herself.
The country's population, two hundred and nine million people, is bitterly polarized.
Today's bitterly polarized political environment, of course, makes any compromise extremely difficult.
McSally lost a close and bitterly contested race in November to Sen.
Prime Minister Theresa May said she was "bitterly disappointed" by the ruling.
So do many campaigners bitterly opposed to the outcome of recent elections.
They fought bitterly about them and have rolled some of them back.
And now, the 4 million member-strong Facebook assembly is bitterly divided.
Trump has complained bitterly about Senate rules slowing progress on his agenda.
But in his speech, Macedonian President Gjorge Ivanov complained bitterly about delays.
Baseball is full of unfair, even bitterly cruel, endings to great careers.
The two men split bitterly in 1932, but eventually they would reconcile.
But he also complains bitterly when the stories turn negative or personal.
"It was a massive battle that we lost, bitterly lost," she said.
"Maybe some people were never designed to have children," Alix says, bitterly.
Is the biting, waltzing third movement a bitterly ironic jab at tyranny?
The Sri Lankan government has been bitterly divided and dysfunctional for months.
The upgrade would increase the Bitcoin network's capacity, but is bitterly contested.
"You either know somebody, or you don't get in," he said bitterly.
Five years ago, Mr. Icahn bitterly contested Dell's efforts to go private.
His bid for the Senate could further roil a bitterly divided nation.
Conversations with 20 workers reveal a workplace bitterly divided on these questions.
In her hands, Leonard Cohen's ominous, sarcastic "Everybody Knows" sounded bitterly prophetic.
A number of landowners in Nebraska were bitterly opposed to that line.
The about-face on the issue was bitterly denounced by abortion opponents.
"We all know what happened with your first handmaid," Naomi says bitterly.
Mahathir Mohamad, a former prime minister, has won a bitterly contested election.
I hated them as bitterly and as contemptuously as Dally Winston hated.
Why, he bitterly wonders, do today's young gay men insist on marrying?
Sprawling estates were surrounded with towering elms and bitterly dry pine needles.
"He was on the run for almost a month," says Crane, bitterly.
He complained bitterly that technocrats had been sidelined in favour of unqualified types.
The country at that time was bitterly divided over the issue of slavery.
By the end, Cruz bitterly labeled his conqueror an "utterly amoral" pathological liar.
What are Brett Kavanaugh&aposs chances for confirmation in a bitterly divided Senate?
Protestants have argued bitterly and fought violently over exactly what the Bible teaches.
We can struggle through at the moment ... but the situation is bitterly difficult.
Don't sugarcoat it for the first-timer or anything, lady, I thought bitterly.
But the U.S. Embassy move, bitterly opposed by the Palestinians, added further fuel.
There's also no obvious candidate to replace her in a bitterly divided party.
But Ravel bitterly complained the format enabled intransigent Republican commissioners to cause gridlock.
What is more, Kashmir's decades of turmoil have left its society bitterly divided.
Chris Christie and give Senate Republicans another vote in already bitterly divided chamber.
His claim to the presidency, unlike that of his forerunners, is bitterly contested.
For almost a decade, Australia has fought bitterly over efforts to curb polluters.
A bitterly divided Supreme Court upheld (5-3) the Geary Act in 1893.
Mayor Marty Walsh urged residents to take precautions for the bitterly cold weather.
In that bitterly divided 5-4 decision, San Antonio Independent School District v.
What's more, he and Mr. Stone have bitterly fallen out over the issue.
Kashmir rarely gets bitterly cold; Gulmarg lies at the same latitude as Atlanta.
But Russia wasn't the only topic Trump and world leaders bitterly disagreed over.
And the United States under Donald Trump becomes more bitterly divided and unpredictable.
Clinton, for starters, can't seem to restrain herself from venting bitterly about Sanders.
Bitterly aware of his own impotence, he stopped writing and fell into depression.
Democrats have complained bitterly that Republicans have let recalcitrant witnesses off the hook.
She wrote bitterly about how political imperatives obstruct the greater demands for justice.
She listens to a drunk Logan bitterly predict the end of the species.
Carson, whose district included Tar Creek, fought bitterly with Inhofe over environmental cleanup.
"The local researchers' role was mainly to collect samples," Dr. Marques said bitterly.
Fatima, 31, tells us bitterly that it is impossible to live decently there.
Many of these expansions of voting rights were bitterly opposed at the time.
Asked if they had learned anything during their ostensible training, they laughed bitterly.
"I hope they don't bitterly disappoint the people again," one Weibo user wrote.
British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was bitterly opposed to German reunification, for example.
Yet Malheur is a place of bitterly contested human histories that remain potent today.
Financial elites and low-education voters accuse each other bitterly of setting the agenda.
Despite signing prenuptial agreements with his brides, both of his divorces were bitterly contested.
Within a few hours, The Last Night went from universally appealing to bitterly divisive.
And Mr Trump will have to push the reforms through a bitterly divided Congress.
"They don't like it, but they don't live on the range," Martin said bitterly.
Besides the aridity, the Martian surface is bitterly cold and blasted by solar radiation.
"The irony is that the people feed those who kill them," he remarks bitterly.
"To be thus is nothing," he says bitterly of the status he once coveted.
John McCain, who has feuded bitterly with Trump in the past, applauded the attack.
"Another clinch, another clinch and the referee wouldn't say anything," said the Briton bitterly.
And so they take off, with his bitterly racist father (Jonathan Banks) in tow.
The Timbers' official Twitter account even tweeted bitterly at the Galaxy after the match.
Fracking remains controversial, with many activists and environmental groups still bitterly opposed to it.
His confirmation by the Senate was bitterly contested by the standards of the day.
The cases have bitterly divided the nine justices and stirred passions across the country.
His father (Tom Skerritt) bitterly deplores the outsourcing of American jobs to other countries.
The U.S. House of Representatives Intelligence Committee on the other hand is bitterly divided.
Members of Congress in both parties have often fought bitterly over congressional oversight efforts.
"When you actually pay, you can see how relieved they are," Mothakge said bitterly.
As the relationship unravelled, she and Bush had argued bitterly, and at times violently.
Renzi hit out bitterly at criticism during the campaign of himself and his party.
Workers, however, put in fewer hours last month likely because of bitterly cold weather.
If the Irish can exploit that presumption, Deschamps' side could find themselves bitterly frustrated.
The stage, then, was tantalizingly set, but the play that followed was bitterly disappointing.
The telecommunications industry bitterly opposed them and enthusiastically backed a repeal under President Trump.
They are bitterly opposed, in terms that will be uncomfortably familiar to contemporary readers.
Sometimes bitterly so, with jokes that leave you tearing up as much as laughing.
Every week brings fresh speculation that her own bitterly divided party will dump her.
Once allied to Mr. Poroshenko, Mr. Kolomoisky is now bitterly opposed to the president.
On Wednesday, the Israeli military cleared itself of wrongdoing in the bitterly contested episode.
We got ourselves back into the game with the goal and it's bitterly disappointing.
In a nation bitterly divided over gun ownership issues, these efforts have met dissent.
An 11th-grade boy I teach complained bitterly in class about a recent situation.
Where I grew up, in the North of England, her name was uttered bitterly.
He says, "Brackets, laughs bitterly" to convey some degree of irony or self-loathing.
A captain and his wife spar bitterly over the education of their daughter, Bertha.
"All prior administrations from President Lyndon Johnson have tried and bitterly failed," Trump said.
New Orleans is halfway through a bitterly contested plan to remove four Confederate monuments.
But Monday's event, which took place on a bitterly cold morning, was ultimately peaceful.
The chive people are complaining bitterly that she was treated unfairly by the media.
And how do you recover, as a country, from such a bitterly partisan episode?
Your Money Adviser It's bitterly cold, and holiday bills have drained your bank account.
Abortion is one of the most bitterly contested social issues in the United States.
Seoul (CNN)It's a bitterly cold, bleak day on a military base in South Korea.
And in that vacuum, the pretenders to that role are all attacking one another bitterly.
Even though they disagreed bitterly, I discovered their secret for remaining the best of friends.
Giorgi Tsindeliani from Nakra, whose family owns land near the tunnel path, is bitterly opposed.
Or do you put them back, bitterly cursing the hell from which cork heels come?
Other people may have bought above the current price and are bitterly regretting their mistake.
In a final parallel, farmers in both Nigeria and Bangladesh complain bitterly about excessive supply.
The episode foreshadowed the bitterly personal feud that is likely to fuel the general election.
It pushed eastward and states including Massachusetts, New York and Pennsylvania experienced bitterly cold temperatures.
Any final deal with the EU will also require ratification by a bitterly split parliament.
Trump has fought bitterly with the family of a slain Muslim soldier and criticized Sen.
While the House Intelligence Commmittee has been bitterly divided over its Trump-Russia investigation, Sen.
Bring about a reconciliation for the bitterly divided Palestinians between the West Bank and Gaza.
Rebman said it was bitterly cold that morning, with temperatures around minus 4 degrees Fahrenheit. 
It's just astounding to me how bitterly divided this state is becoming, and has become.
Venezuela's bitterly divided government and opposition are engaged in a dialogue mediated by Norway's government.
When she sees that payphone, she bitterly remembers that Possum Springs has no cell service.
And it's making a bitterly divided and angry nation more divided and angrier than necessary.
"No one truly knows his own begetting," Telemachus bitterly observes, early in the Odyssey. Indeed.
Now, bitterly divided lawmakers must find an agreement to raise the limit sooner or later.
Lovell pulled the sheet out, scanned it, and looked bitterly pleased with what it contained.
"You walk in with a sore foot, and you never leave," a daughter said bitterly.
The two fought bitterly in court over their divorce and the custody of their children.
The results of the 2014 general election, won by FRELIMO, were bitterly contested by RENAMO.
The coalition partners fought bitterly over election appointments, delaying a parliamentary vote by three years.
May's cabinet remained bitterly divided over Britain's departure from the European Union, known as Brexit.
Trump bitterly accused the media of lying when it questioned his narrative of the summit.
Loaded rhetoric from the White House and Democrats this weekend promises a bitterly partisan trial.
But his family was bitterly opposed to their relationship because she was part Native American.
The White House and Congress clashed bitterly over Trump's refusal to release these approved funds.
Susan Collins is already moving to blunt Schumer's tactics, which she has complained about bitterly.
North Carolinians have been battling, often bitterly, over their vision for the state for decades.
And far from reconciling the country to itself, the vote has left it bitterly divided.
McMahon and Murphy bitterly vied for the Senate seat eventually won by Murphy in 2012.
Both men came to power in 2014 after a bitterly contested election marred by fraud.
In recent years, Western businesses have complained bitterly about unequal access to the Chinese market.
Democrats were bitterly disappointed by the compromises Obama made when he had huge Democratic majorities.
But the policy reversals have left some on the right feeling betrayed, often bitterly so.
American politics might be polarized and divided with two sides bitterly angry at each other.
Any idea of secession is bitterly opposed by the governments in Baghdad, Turkey and Iran.
After all, what else is there to do in the bitterly cold lands of northern Westeros?
Islamic State, which is bitterly opposed by the Taliban, said it carried out the Kabul attack.
Brits are royally cheesed off after a "diabolical" cheeseboard event left hundreds of people bitterly disappointed.
In a bitterly divided Britain, though, "White Teeth" reminds us of just how much has changed.
For a country bitterly divided and eternally at war, his popularity is an unusually unifying factor.
For Democrats, it's a major victory in what's still the beginning of a bitterly divided Congress.
Doing so would once again bitterly divide the country and might even lead to civil unrest.
Roy tweeted throughout the trip, often about the bitterly cold weather throughout much of the trip.
Just like winter, it doesn't matter how bitterly cold it is, sooner or later, spring arrives.
Planet Nine is bitterly cold—but this data suggests that it's being heated from the inside.
Winter has come, it is bitterly cold, and Jim White is still humming happily away. Flash!
Mr Schäuble's finance ministry bitterly resists anything that smacks of a "transfer union" or debt mutualisation.
While his stint with the Baratheons ended bitterly, Davos' time with them wasn't spent in vain.
It pushed eastward and states including Massachusetts, New York and Pennsylvania were experiencing bitterly cold temperatures.
All of these problems have been heightened by the close, heated, and bitterly divided 2016 contest.
After this bitterly contested election, how do you convince a young woman to run for office?
Bitterly at odds with the presidency, Saraki had often worked to frustrate bills proposed by Buhari.
The families of those who died at Hillsborough said they were bitterly disappointed with the decision.
"Super Bowl 50" it proudly proclaimed, driving home a message some have received bitterly: Until Feb.
Grassroots Out and Vote Leave, the rivals to be designated as official campaigners, are bitterly divided.
"I'm fucking awful," one of the accused replied bitterly, when I got him on the phone.
Reform opponents and supporters fight bitterly to this day about whether Booker's overhaul failed or succeeded.
They disagreed, often bitterly, but accepted that a compromised achievement is better than an unattainable perfection.
His polite rejection when she returns to his room the next night leaves her bitterly stung.
While most of health reform has become bitterly ideological, the bipartisan support for home visiting remains.
Mr. Clinton won the bitterly contested New York primary in 1992, catapulting him to the nomination.
Bulls and Bears • The use of Chumbawamba's "Tubthumping" to underscore Bobby's resilience is slyly, bitterly ironic.
For most of the 2016 campaign, the Republicans vying to overtake Mr. Trump have squabbled bitterly.
Varela served as Martinelli's vice president but they have sparred bitterly since the transfer of power.
Only through shared Cowboys schadenfreude can we hope to unite after a bitterly contested political campaign.
Between the lines: The gas pipeline is something Trump has been complaining bitterly about for months.
Mr Masuzoe and the central government fought bitterly over the city's share of the price tag.
Through bitterly cold winters, residents board up their windows and try to avoid shelling and frostbite.
Still, the $2 trillion package is a rare show of bipartisanship from two bitterly polarized parties.
That night, as the clear desert air turned bitterly cold, the men warmed themselves around bonfires.
Andrew Prokop: I bet Trump will bitterly denounce the voters for being losers as he concedes.
Furthermore, cutting out Democrats made the effort bitterly partisan and ended up sinking the health bill.
Now, the town is bitterly split over a plan to host a medical nuclear waste site.
Mr. Wolff portrayed Mr. Weissmann as bitterly disappointed by his boss's refusal to indict the president.
One occupied a ramshackle rural house and spoke bitterly about the ruin of her literary career.
The Taliban bitterly oppose elections, depicting them as a Western concept imposed on the Afghan people.
"You're able to have scruples and morals because you have a job," he tells her bitterly.
His latest show, held in a warehouse on a bitterly cold Monday morning, underscored exactly why.
Doctors Without Borders, a medical charity that conducts rescue missions in the Mediterranean Sea, reacted bitterly.
Naturally, many in the party will likely try their hardest to avoid a bitterly contested convention.
Republicans complained bitterly at the time, and Democrats threw those complaints back at them this week.
Restaurants complained bitterly, saying it would change the taste and texture of the food they served.
Trump addressed a Congress that remains bitterly divided over whether he committed high crimes and misdemeanors.
Worse, Rosa (Ella Rubin), a beautiful, blooming fifteen-year-old, is bitterly ashamed of her mother.
But statehood failed for many years in Congress because lawmakers from the South bitterly opposed it.
" And when cars go driverless, he added bitterly, "cabbies and Uber drivers will both be history.
The previous day's protests ended bitterly, with hundreds gathered in anger outside Mong Kok police station.
It was still bitterly cold, but the rain had stopped and there was no snow outside.
What the E.R.A. would change and what it would not is both bitterly contested and hypothetical.
The nostrums of 12-step recovery, even with Emma resisting them bitterly, are not inherently dramatic.
When the world seems to be arrayed against you, you can chuckle bitterly or fight back.
But more time doesn't put the bitterly divided UK any closer to a solution on Brexit.
It would be bitterly funny, in an ironic sort of way, if it weren't so sobering.
While our public discourse is not immune to overstatement and hyperbole, it is neither overstatement nor hyperbole to suggest that the current Republican president appears determined to bitterly divide Americans against each other, and in the process, he is bitterly dividing Republicans against each other as well.
The big picture: The two major parties are both bitterly divided between each other, and among themselves.
Boutros-Ghali would go on to bitterly blame the Clinton administration for undercutting the U.N.'s efforts.
Iowa and Nevada were both bitterly contested by the Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders campaigns last cycle.
In subsequent years, Iran has complained bitterly of American drone flights near its land and maritime borders.
"All of us must bitterly regret that we did not do more to prevent it," he said.
Mr Entsch and fellow politicians, however, are bitterly divided over whether asking voters is the best approach.
The GDPR was bitterly opposed by the computing industry, but has since been copied by other jurisdictions.
"When the price of cotton goes up, so does the rent we pay," says one woman bitterly.
The bitterly divided House voted on nearly exact partisan lines regarding the impeachment inquiry into President Trump.
The lack of statues of women has been obvious for years: "London's Immortals" complains bitterly about it.
I was just bitterly out of my mind and I wouldn't wish that on my worst enemy.
Bitterly cold weather across Europe and Asia in December and January has encouraged strong exports to continue.
Yet the talks have been bitterly hostile, partly because they have been conducted amid two election campaigns.
Early days: With Congress bitterly divided on so many issues, the markup displayed a surprising bipartisan congeniality.
But, he's been incredibly critical of—bitterly critical of—the New York media that he deals with.
By the time they returned in early 2014, it was the dead of a bitterly cold winter.
And while political leaders in Baghdad already were declaring victory, soldiers were still bitterly fighting for ground.
The fan was "bitterly disappointed when her health prevented her from attending", the hospice wrote on YouTube.
"This park was built to appease us by the company who built that dam," Yildirim said bitterly.
"We will never again trust our politicians or tribal leaders or imams," said one Fallujah resident bitterly.
Icahn had spent the second half of 2016 complaining bitterly about CVR's obligation to buy RIN s.
During the unusual West Virginia campaign, Blankenship targeted McConnell repeatedly in bitterly personal and even racist terms.
He noted bitterly that the United States government had refused him a visa for twenty-four years.
"They done moved this lady three times, and every time the apartment's getting bigger," Mercedes said bitterly.
He claims he supports internet openness, and yet he bitterly opposed the 2015 FCC Open Internet order.
On a bitterly cold morning, Wang Fuman, 8, trekked 2.8 miles to school as he usually did.
Mr. Erdogan has bitterly condemned the new prosecution and sought to persuade American officials to drop it.
"A few little crumbs," Rabbi Rick Jacobs, president of the Union for Reform Judaism, bitterly called it.
On a bitterly cold day last winter, Sumaya's mother placed her on her school bus in Brooklyn.
Lyudmila ruminated bitterly about friends who had testified against her husband, said Viktoria Skripal, Mr. Skripal's niece.
Educators, at times, complain bitterly about them, and many policies have been designed to address these issues.
In a country bitterly divided over the Trump presidency and his looming impeachment, heated arguments will begin.
Even during a bitterly contested campaign, President Bush understood what was at stake in the 85033 election.
References to a second American civil war – no matter how far-fetched – reveal a bitterly divided nation.
"Forty years of our history were reduced to Stasi crimes," Karina Kafidoff, a local retiree, said bitterly.
In a bitterly fought referendum, the United Kingdom voted in June 2016 to leave the European Union.
He bitterly resisted the claim, which cast a shadow of doubt over the legitimacy of his victory.
Elon Musk, the CEO of Tesla, has complained bitterly about the importance of meeting quarterly earnings targets.
Tuesday's hearing offered little progress on any of those fronts and was bitterly divided from the start.
Which is bitterly divided without the ability to even agree on a set of facts and truths.
The weather was bitterly cold, and we had the greatest difficulty in keeping ourselves from being frozen.
The inclusion of military representatives in the investigation team is highly unusual and has been bitterly criticized.
Much of the country endured a bitterly cold stretch, causing more people to be crowded together inside.
It was bitterly cold, but the sky had cleared and the sun reflected dazzlingly off the frosted terrain.
Many Arabs saw the influx of Jews as a European colonial movement, and the two peoples fought bitterly.
It is likely to lead to months of negotiations to form a government in a bitterly divided parliament.
It is a promising start, and all the more so at the end of a bitterly divisive year.
"I just want to tell stories," I complained bitterly to another game master, burnt-out and increasingly discouraged.
President Sisi presents himself as their ally and protector, so Islamist foes of the government bitterly resent them.
But getting a bitterly divided Senate to confirm him was an easy challenge compared with what comes next.
But a closer examination of the polls reveals another story: America is now bitterly divided across party lines.
The bitterly divided Senate voted 50-48 on Saturday to confirm Kavanaugh, with just one Democrat supporting him.
For 43 years it had granted the bitterly disputed Muslim-majority region a modicum of autonomy within India.
It was "bitterly disappointing", says Paddy Nixon, vice-chancellor of Ulster University (UU), who had masterminded the plan.
The Afghan political elite has also been extremely divided, the rifts widened by a bitterly contested presidential election.
Many people in Hong Kong are bitterly frustrated by their lack of say in how they are governed.
At this point in a bitterly acrimonious election cycle, people might be in need of some light relief.
Her exit comes on the heels of a tense season, in which she's feuded bitterly with Josephs, 50.
The four states that depend on the Murray and its tributaries had been fighting bitterly over its contents.
Mr Branagh reveals a man who, though confident in his own talent, bitterly regrets the sacrifices it demanded.
The city's ruin may be completed as the bitterly polarized struggle in Syria moves to its next phase.
But if it's bitterly cold and all the right weather conditions align, something curious and beautiful can happen.
Long feud with Trump It was Obama's latest salvo in what's become a bitterly negative campaign against Trump.
Description: Citizens in Western democracies have fought bitterly in recent years over the importance of borders and migration.
Many other parts of the nation, meanwhile, will have a bitterly cold but clear holiday, weather forecasters said.
During those bitterly cold recesses, I would curl up in my down parka and sleep underneath a bench.
Our strongest allies are bitterly disappointed, and I think that will hurt our business over the long term.
As the photos circulated across a bitterly cynical internet, outrage, scorn, and ridicule flew in the governor's direction.
That margin is all but sure to make Michigan one of the most bitterly fought battlegrounds of 2020.
"The attitude there is: Yeah, we know Dragnea steals, but he steals for us too," Marinescu said bitterly.
Countries hosting lots of refugees bitterly resent the rest of the world for failing to do its bit.
The health care law was one of the most bitterly contested pieces of legislation in the country's history.
He is seen by most Thais as a unifying force in a nation bitterly divided along political lines.
Qunun's safety, even with her now massive Twitter following, has been bitterly contested and remains far from guaranteed.
The president has bitterly complained about German luxury cars flooding U.S. markets at the expense of American automobiles.
The first schism with Catholic doctrine came in 513, when divorce was legalised after a bitterly fought referendum.
CF is also a disease I've fought bitterly for 32 years since being diagnosed at six months old.
For Mexicans, the sight of a public official accumulating an inexplicable fortune while in office is bitterly familiar.
The bill does not touch the federal funding fight over Zika, which has been bitterly partisan for weeks.
It's a guy-gal dance in a parking lot that starts out playful and ends up bitterly combative.
Eight years after the Affordable Care Act passed, Americans still remain bitterly divided over the health care law.
The loser will be bitterly disappointed and facing serious questions about its preparations, its psyche and its future.
Work on the Thirty Meter Telescope on Mauna Kea, bitterly opposed by Hawaiian activists, could start soon. Gov.
They complain bitterly about the lack of legal protections and civil rights, along with endemic and institutional corruption.
The state's political leadership, bitterly divided between a Democratic governor and a Republican legislature, has pushed ahead regardless.
"I saw you sitting back in your very fine chateau—big oak beams, heirloom furniture," she says bitterly.
The two sides clashed bitterly, trading insinuations of dirty tricks; ultimately, Mr. Yeger won by a wide margin.
After all, many Republican senators voted in favor of their party's repeal effort after having bitterly denounced it.
It will remain bitterly cold across Europe's southeast today, but temperatures are expected to rise in Western Europe.
Mr. Trump has bitterly denounced Mr. Sessions's recusal, saying he needs an attorney general who will protect him.
The stalled aid package is one more sign of how bitterly divided along partisan lines Congress has become.
He sat in front of his window, as gusts of snow spiraled outside in a bitterly cold wind.
University educations have been shifting from a widely-admired public good to the subject of bitterly partisan arguments.
Russia was also muted about the Iraqi Kurdistan Regional Government's independence referendum to which Ankara was bitterly opposed.
Wade, testifying in Congress and bitterly attacking Barack Obama when he ran for president and then re-election.
A bitterly divided Senate Rules Committee approved approved the changes last month along on a party line vote.
The YPG have bitterly complained about Russia withdrawing its modest presence in Afrin as Turkey prepared to attack.
Congress has fallen into a stalemate of bitterly opposed factions within parties, let alone the Republican/Democratic divide.
If the move to renew it gained real traction, would it affect today's most bitterly fought culture wars?
Turnbull cited such "bitterly entrenched views" in his farewell speech last week as a reason for the political deadlock.
The UAW also lost a bitterly contested vote at a Nissan Motor Co Ltd plant in Mississippi in August.
Thailand held a bitterly fought general election in March five years after the military seized power in a coup.
Instead, Tuesday's hearing regularly veered off course — and into some of the most bitterly partisan debates of the moment.
As long as Europeans are bitterly divided about this question, they can hardly have a clear policy about immigration.
Winston Churchill's wartime government drew heavily on economic and military help from India but he bitterly resisted its freedom.
Ocean levels fall sharply in such bitterly cold periods as water is tied up in massive continental ice sheets.
The contestant—once the beans had been spilled, in 1958, by Mr Stempel and others—bitterly regretted his behaviour.
Ted Cruz, who bitterly sparred with Trump during their primary battle, would not endorse the mogul during his speech.
In 2016 he wrote about his lost love of Trump the businessman and complained bitterly about Trump the politician.
The bitterly divided U.S. Senate voted 50-48 on Saturday to confirm Kavanaugh, with just one Democrat supporting him.
Bernie Sanders, many of whom remain bitterly disappointed in their candidate's loss to Clinton in this year's primary contests.
They are their own world, a space for working or relaxing, either shared or private, boiling or bitterly cold.
They complained bitterly to each other about their workload, but never shared these thoughts with those in ground control.
It does not help Republicans or Democrats to have the FBI at the center of a bitterly fought election.
But you need to understand that as we approach the end of 2016, Britain is a nation bitterly divided.
They also bitterly point out that he has retrospectively put himself on the winning side of the Brexit debate.
In a territory bitterly divided between democrats and the party's backers, the party needs any friends it can get.
Efforts by European and American libraries to digitise hundreds of thousands of Christian codices have ended abruptly, often bitterly.
Defense Department officials were bitterly disappointed, especially given that ­Google has a number of partnerships with Chinese technology companies.
But it ended bitterly with allegations of financial fraud, scientific goof-ups, and a power struggle outside the dome.
Europe is the issue that has divided the Tories more bitterly than any other over the past 50 years.
Pai went on to clash bitterly with Tom Wheeler, the Democrat who led the FCC during Obama's later years.
Sessions refused, and Trump went on to complain bitterly about his attorney general, until Sessions eventually resigned under pressure.
The construction of Belo Monte was bitterly opposed by indigenous groups and environmentalists because of its scale and location.
But fights over side issues related to abortion and Obama's signature healthcare law have bitterly divided the two parties.
But in an increasingly divisive, bitterly partisan world, not even the booze we drink is free of political spin.
But they are bitterly divided about whether that would mean its salvation or the ruin of its considerable charm.
Aid-watchers, who row bitterly over whether the world needs more foreign aid or less, mostly agree with them.
Weeping bitterly, his mother Jameela said her son, who was ill and on medication, was arrested on Aug. 5.
A long line of moviegoers stretched down West 44th Street on one of New York's first bitterly cold days.
But he sold the theater to the church in 1991, a move still bitterly lamented by some producers today.
Ditko left Marvel in 1966, Kirby in 1970, both men complaining bitterly that Lee took credit for their work.
And the controversy that blew up around Omar is a foretaste of how bitterly that space will be contested.
His company has worked with higher-volume producers before, though the marriages were sometimes rocky and one ended bitterly.
"We, the players, invested so much time and money and our net result is disappointment," Mook told me bitterly.
When the Anti-Defamation League listed the "alt-lite" as a "hate movement" nonetheless, its leading pundits complained bitterly.
In our bitterly polarized era, only 37% of the public expresses a "great deal" of confidence in the presidency.
Afterward, while cleaning up the mess he left after suffering what we think was a stroke, I cried bitterly.
I know, it's become fashionable to argue that the country is the most bitterly split since the Civil War.
Trump had complained bitterly over China's perceived inaction on its fentanyl trade, and he threatened economic punishment in return.
Americans will increasingly find themselves able to bitterly denounce or unflinchingly laud Donald Trump, to a chorus of agreement.
Russia bitterly opposes the split, comparing it to the Great Schism of 1054 that divided western and eastern Christianity.
But at the same time, the two sides are squabbling bitterly over the future and funding of European defense.
Renault and the French government, its biggest shareholder, responded bitterly and maintained a presumption of innocence toward Mr. Ghosn.
After bitterly protesting MoviePass's movie ticket subscription model, AMC has come up with a subscription plan of its own.
The piece was composed when America was bitterly polarized by the Vietnam War and protests raged on college campuses.
Background: President Ghani, the winner of a bitterly disputed vote, had announced he was going ahead with his inauguration.
He fought bitterly against Dell's decision to go private five years ago, and almost succeeded in scuttling the deal.
Some government officials bitterly opposed the terms, but there was no leeway, according to officials involved in the negotiations.
That level of consensus seems hard to imagine in the bitterly polarized Senate of today, just 20 years later.
The massive demonstrations outside Parliament on Saturday made clear that every step of the way would be bitterly contested.
But she's just good enough -- and naive enough -- that when she messes up, we feel bitterly disappointed in her.
For years, Microsoft and other Western software companies have bitterly complained that software piracy was rampant in those countries.
Mr. Prabowo lost a bitterly contested presidential race in 2014 and appears set to run against Mr. Joko again.
So they're bitterly battling one another, each with the hope that they'll emerge as the main alternative to Biden.
And what exactly were Lenny Snyder's "accomplishments," which are conceded to him, no matter how bitterly, by his son?
If the Republican Party of Arizona were less bitterly divided, those sentiments might have prevailed over Ducey's political concerns.
The United States, which has tangled bitterly with Russia over the Syrian conflict, quickly condemned the assassination in Ankara.
Republicans say that the achievement -- particularly after the bitterly partisan confirmation fight -- will mobilize their base heading into November.
Bernie Sanders came to the Capitol on Thursday, when the Senate considered a judicial nominee bitterly opposed by liberals.
In recent weeks the Trump administration has fought bitterly with California over immigration, the president's tax returns and homelessness.
He said he ''owned'' that, but then complained that the press perpetrates a bitterly unfair double standard against him.
Passage of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) represents a rare moment of bipartisanship in a bitterly divided Congress.
It has also bitterly divided Catalan society between those who support independence and those who favor unity with Spain.
The letter is to Diaghilev, whom Nijinsky says he will not deign to name, but whom he bitterly denounces.
He has been broadly supportive of Trump this year after a bitterly divisive battle for the nomination in 2016.
Ibrahimovic, who has won league titles in Italy, the Netherlands, Spain and France, said that outcome was bitterly disappointing.
As Hela bitterly remarks, Odin is proud of his power and riches, but ashamed of how he got them.
Some Democrats embrace Mr. Trump's concerns about trade deals while they bitterly oppose the tax bill and regulatory rollbacks.
Bold and vigorous in their expression, the collective Taring Padi has bitterly denounced the corruption of the Indonesian government.
For some observers, the bitterly divided 2016 campaign, which pitted fact against fantasy and policy against paranoia, was new.
"If anyone should be ashamed, it is my commander, because he did not stand by me," he ended bitterly.
It's the kind of charge, he said, that lands hard in a nation bitterly divided, often along ethnic lines.
The USMCA's passage in the House marks one of the most significant bipartisan breakthroughs in a bitterly divided Congress.
But the legacy of that conflict — and the military dictatorship that followed — remains a bitterly divisive issue in Spain.
The Obama administration spent the next three years bitterly divided over whether, or how, to take action against Assad.
To make matters worse, turmoil hit the newsroom last year when staff members complained bitterly of a culture of fear.
More bitterly cold temperatures are expected for later this week and weekend in the Midwest and Northeast, according to Weather.com.
Although Snapchat and Instagram are competing bitterly for ad dollars, teens have room for both of them on their phones.
The two pipelines, called the Atlantic Coast Pipeline and the Mountain Valley Pipeline, are bitterly opposed by left-leaning activists.
The Democratic Party (PD), whose leader, Matteo Renzi, resigned as prime minister after his proposals were rejected, emerged bitterly divided.
His hand bitterly but clearly conjures the spider that is the most astonishing image of one speech in the play.
When Ukraine was annexed in 2014 the place was shut down and its Cossack benefactors became bitterly divided by nationality.
Closer to home, Torch gave Americans a small taste of what Britons knew bitterly well: war meant killing and death.
That's led to a political blame game in Sri Lanka, where the president and prime minister were already bitterly divided.
He also resisted the temptation to make too big a deal out of a first season that ultimately ended bitterly.
"These people want to break my spirit ... They want me to know my place," he wrote bitterly to his wife.
Trump has complained bitterly about stonewalling by Democrats, who have withheld support for many of the president's Cabinet-level nominees.
Whether perched or flying, Bruegel's silhouetted crows, despite being bitterly cold, seem as content as the silhouetted skaters down below.
Instead, he thinks Clinton would move the country to the right, pointing to her last bitterly fought campaign against Obama.
The bill is one of the few proposals with a significant chance of becoming law amid a bitterly divided Congress.
Farah's governor resigned in January, claiming political interference and corruption, and residents have complained bitterly about security in the province.
Trump has complained bitterly about stonewalling by Democrats, who have withheld support for many of the president's Cabinet-level nominees.
The deepening dispute has tarnished Poland's reputation in the EU and has also bitterly divided the country of 38 million.
But Shtayner complains bitterly of the press coverage he and his family have received thanks to his association with Cohen.
Only, there are also funeral arrangements, a bitterly cold room for the lifeless baby, and the longest drive home imaginable.
Some designees, notably MetLife, complained bitterly about the status, arguing that the process behind being named a SIFI was opaque.
"The military parliamentarians are opposing it bitterly, but they are just the puppets," ruling party spokesman Myo Nyunt told Reuters.
The Kavanaugh debacle also bitterly reminds women from all walks of life just how little regard Republicans have for them.
He complained bitterly about the majority's statement that Massachusetts' "quasi-sovereign" interests entitled it to "special solicitude" in standing analysis.
Labor is likely to be bitterly divided in California's top-two primary, which will include candidates of all political parties.
Trump has feuded bitterly with the anchors of the morning political talk show "Morning Joe" on NBC's cable outlet, MSNBC.
The first was more bitterly toxic (my mother got a whiff of its vulgarity and forbade it) than the second.
As we reported, Djimon complained bitterly on Father's Day Kimora wouldn't let him see their 10-year-old son, Kenzo.
But while the Democrats have been bitterly divided for the past month, Trump has mostly squandered his unexpected head start.
Ms. Haley, seen above last year, is a rising star in Republican politics and has sparred bitterly with Mr. Trump.
In case you hadn't heard, the U.K. is experiencing some of the most bitterly cold weather conditions in 27 years.
I pray he will continue to protect the court from being infected by the partisanship that bitterly divides our nation.
But he wasn't there long — Stone bitterly clashed with campaign manager Corey Lewandowski and stepped down in early August 22016.
We know Brad has bitterly complained he feels Angelina is trying to deny him the right to parent their kids.
According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, government forces had seized roughly a third of the bitterly contested territory.
The bloc has since been bitterly at odds over how to share out the responsibility of taking care of them.
Even so, Mr. Bowers's writings on social media were bitterly hostile to refugees and to the agency that helped them.
It has bitterly divided diaspora leaders in Richmond Hill, Queens, pitting Hindu priests, civic associations and relatives against one another.
Some of those rebel groups are supported by the United States, but are bitterly opposed to Turkey and its proxies.
The ruins of the mosque in Ayodhya still remain one of the most bitterly disputed religious places in the world.
The Supreme Court ruled Thursday on two bitterly contested cases that addressed issues fundamental to the American political system itself.
It was a bitterly cold night, with temperatures in the teens, and the wind chill made it feel below zero.
The Sri Lankan government is bitterly divided, which may have contributed to the security failures leading up to the bombings.
Moscow bitterly nicknamed the U.S. "the United Sanctions of America" after the last round of Skripal-related sanctions in August.
On Twitter Wednesday morning, Mr. Trump bitterly complained about the speculation by the public and some journalists about her absence.
Voters in Scotland rejected independence in a bitterly contested 2014 referendum, but separatism remains a potent force in Scottish politics.
His vexed relations with the press have turned bitterly hostile, for example, and his list of grievances keeps getting longer.
They complained bitterly that the United States had forfeited its role as a credible broker between them and the Israelis.
Andrew Cuomo easily defeated Cynthia Nixon, turning aside a challenge from the left that led to a bitterly contested race.
The country is bitterly divided over the abortion issue, a procedure outlawed now even in cases of rape and incest.
It was this week in 1848 that the Californian announced, bitterly, that it would halt publication, two years after starting.
In my years of research, I have met many elderly artists who bitterly complain about the absence of public museums.
After seven months of street protests against Beijing's assault on these liberties, Hong Kong is color-coded — and bitterly divided.
Bitterly cold air will settle in areas of the Midwest on Sunday before making its way east Monday and Tuesday.
Mr. Erdogan has reacted to that criticism bitterly, threatening to break with the bloc and even restore the death penalty.
Finally, in 1806, came a bitterly fought election in Essex County to decide where a new courthouse would be built.
New Orleans is halfway through a bitterly contested plan to remove four Confederate monuments from public spaces in the city.
His brother, Rooster (Danny Masterson), has settled into nesting with Mary (Megyn Price) after bitterly evicting himself from the homestead.
She bitterly curses Serena Joy when she's taunted by the image of Hannah but is unable to speak to her.
It was a bitterly disappointing end of the season for Tennessee, once 5-0 and ranked in the top 10.
The House Oversight Committee did not invite Snyder, a Republican, to testify, something Democrats on the panel complained bitterly about.
Over the last six years, insurance company executives have bitterly complained that federal insurance regulations were extremely prescriptive and onerous.
The landslide result, which proved even more decisive than pollsters had forecast, follows a bitterly-fought and divisive election campaign.
The country's election showed us who we are: bitterly split, with the right-wing half mostly in thrall to demagogy.
Scotland rejected independence from the United Kingdom in 2014 in a bitterly fought independence referendum which still dominates political debate.
On a bitterly cold day last month, Beijing officials informed parents and teachers that the school was unsafe and illegal.
But Russia bitterly opposes the split, comparing it to the Great Schism of 1054 that divided western and eastern Christianity.
When the Senate tried Johnson in the aftermath of the Civil War, politics were no less bitterly polarized than today.
She enoyed sunrise over Antigua at the summit of Acatenango after a "dark, difficult, and bitterly cold 3 a.m. hike."
It was Cruz who beat him in Iowa, and this week Trump bitterly accused the Texan of stealing the caucuses.
At a defining moment in the history of our bitterly divided nation, currently led by a bitterly divisive president who has frightening authoritarian tendencies that would become dangerous to the Republic if he is reelected to a second term, the Democrats have an extraordinary opportunity to win the presidential, House and Senate elections in November.
It was his most overt bid yet to seek party unity at a time when many establishment Republicans bitterly oppose him.
The flashes of genuine hate in Dick's novel are unsettling, but they also make its critique of society more bitterly pointed.
Germany, France and Britain treat the Nord Stream 2 project as a business venture; Poland, Slovakia and Ukraine bitterly oppose it.
Soon the listless addicts care for nothing but the drug and weep bitterly when Odysseus forces them back to their ships.
As one might expect, attempts to formulate demonstrations on fan forums are liable to subside into factionalism and bitterly divisive arguments.
But by the end, I was bitterly disappointed by the movie's latently sexist assumptions and its dated portrayals of gender stereotypes.
It's bitterly cold across parts of the U.S. and Canada right now, and the freezing temps aren't going away anytime soon.
These are icons which might irk the majority of Latvians who bitterly remember the decades-long Soviet occupation of their country.
The shareholders from Saudi Arabia and Kuwait were kept in the dark about the boardroom coup, and complained bitterly about it.
"They are using the excuse that my problem is I was talking too loud about fucking some girls," he complained bitterly.
Other Democrats think that's a dim hope in today's bitterly divided Congress, and see little point in holding out for bipartisanship.
On Thursday night, Donald Trump -- who fought bitterly with Rubio during the presidential primaries -- tweeted that Rubio should seek re-election.
It complained bitterly about her two recent stopovers in America, where she spoke at Columbia University and hobnobbed with foreign diplomats.
He is close to the Saudis, bitterly feuding with Turkey, and not exactly a champion of human rights or press freedom.
The EU had just implemented new privacy rules that targeted breaches just like this, and Facebook had bitterly fought their adoption.
And Republicans bitterly rejected a Democratic proposal to earmark $600 million for Michigan, threatening the first energy bill in a decade.
But in a stunning result the United Kingdom voted to do just that in a bitterly fought referendum in June 2016.
The convention was supposed to be the moment of unity after a bitterly competitive primary between Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders.
The protests, mostly peaceful, illustrated the depth of division in a country still reeling from the bitterly fought 2000 election campaign.
The additional pipeline would increase Trans Mountain's capacity by two-thirds, but is bitterly opposed by greens and some indigenous groups.
Regardless of who wins the Brazilian election, the country's next president will be hard-pressed to unite a bitterly divided nation.
In Washington, customers lined up in bitterly cold weather to purchase a copy at KramerBooks, which began selling copies at midnight.
It has bitterly complained that emergency funds promised by the EU to help cope with the crisis are yet to arrive.
The reality is that at least one of Spurs and Liverpool is likely to miss out, leaving their fans bitterly disappointed.
Madeline refuses to accept her ex-husband's young, pretty wife Bonnie (Zoe Kravitz), and instead glares bitterly while mocking Bonnie's earthiness.
During the last Republican presidency of George W. Bush, a group of conservatives bitterly criticized its drift on deficits and debt.
The sometimes bitterly polarized environment in which they will operate as a political appointee could present challenges that divert their talents.
Donald Trump faces enormous challenges uniting a bitterly divided country in the wake of the nastiest presidential election many can remember.
But let's give him credit for another coup: keeping his actors from mutinying during a bitterly cold, grueling nine-month shoot.
The Council has been bitterly divided, with two of its number mostly boycotting proceedings, and different members regularly issuing contradictory statements.
But for a bitterly divided board of directors at a dysfunctional yet highly innovative company, compromise may be what Uber needs.
Republicans who control Congress have bitterly fought the program, saying it creates unwarranted government intervention in personal healthcare and private industry.
The women fight bitterly over the love of a dead man who was Bertha's husband before he left her for Julynne.
America is a bitterly divided nation, with a president who is subject to the most serious investigation in our country's history.
" Speaking bitterly of Reagan's commercial, he told a crowd at a church in Cleveland: "It's all picket fences and puppy dogs.
Absent from the list of presidential accolades tweeted by Trump was any mention of Arizona's bitterly contested Republican Senate primary. Rep.
Kendi bitterly recalls a speech he gave at an oratory contest in high school, decrying the bad habits of black youth.
Trump has complained bitterly about stonewalling by Democrats, who withheld support early on for many of the president's Cabinet-level nominees.
"The charters of few if any private corporations include concern for the well-being of future generations," he comments, rather bitterly.
In the early weeks of the new administration, Washington, D.C. and Congress look more deeply divided and bitterly partisan than ever.
But despite all the hype, Washington's pretty much exactly where it was 24 hours ago: locked in bitterly partisan trench warfare.
Trump's team — which has been bitterly divided on trade — agreed on this action more than they have any other so far.
While House Republicans clashed bitterly with Holder, Lynch's predecessor, "at least when he came here, he gave us answers," Collins said.
Major mining companies including Glencore and Randgold bitterly opposed the code, which axes tax exemptions and hikes royalties and profit taxes.
Reddick's daughter, Liz (the fantastic Audra McDonald), who is one of the partners, appears ready, bitterly, to confront his past acts.
They worry that the Trump administration will push for a major change in veterans' health care that they have bitterly opposed.
The fallout from the documentary is landing on a bitterly divided society that is wrestling with questions of its own identity.
Some executives who work at Fox's studio offices in Los Angeles have been complaining bitterly about the prospect of Disney management.
CANTON, Ohio — The tax bill convulsing a bitterly divided Congress may seem like the ultimate high stakes political showdown in Washington.
As a rule, they say that three inches thick is safe to go on, two inches if it is bitterly cold.
Perhaps this is cleverly reflective of "our age of bitterly contested realities," in which one man's morality is another man's evil.
Restaurateurs complained bitterly about the "scarlet letters," and what they saw as punitive enforcement aimed at raising money for the city.
TMZ broke the story ... some members of Congress bitterly complained over the last 3 weeks the Capitol should be locked down.
Many bitterly remember the years of the Franco dictatorship, when the regime tried to stamp out Catalan institutions and the language.
We would be bitterly disappointed to attend a production that cut Falstaff's time on stage to provide more of the prince.
RALEIGH, N.C. — Roy Cooper, a Democrat, held a razor-thin lead on Thursday in North Carolina's bitterly contested race for governor.
In 1973, Henry Ford II spoke bitterly and at length to Charles T. Morrissey, an interviewer for the Ford Foundation archives.
That does not bode well for future presidents who are working in a country often sharply and, at times, bitterly divided.
Americans have often fought bitterly about how large our safety net should be and about the precise forms it should take.
There is one topic that consistently earns broad bipartisan support, even though the country is bitterly divided over many political issues.
When Rosie tells Elsa, with compassion, that Elsa's lived many lives already, Elsa bitterly says that she hasn't lived at all.
Manufacturing added 12,000 jobs last month and construction payrolls increased 9,000 despite bitterly cold temperatures in many parts of the country.
In the morning, the sun rose over the mountains, but for hours the high-walled valley remained shaded and bitterly cold.
Mr. Trump has complained bitterly that the Chinese are not doing enough to curb the aggressions of the North Korean government.
While expressing concern about the fate of Khashoggi, Trump continued to complain bitterly about the media in his "60 Minutes" interview.
After all, this is a population that has adapted to an unpredictable ferry service, a lone A.T.M. and bitterly cold weather.
The Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, a veteran of the peace process, said bitterly that the United States had effectively scrapped it.
At the same time, it is not a bitterly partisan issue, which in these days of divided politics feels pretty rare.
So anyone looking for 3,000-year-old cream cheese or smoked salmon in proximity to these bagels will be bitterly disappointed.
Even among those who broadly share a set of metaphysical beliefs, the exact meaning of those religious words can be bitterly contested.
The event underscores the rapprochement between the Yankees and Rodriguez after they fought bitterly over his suspension for using performance-enhancing drugs.
Those are just some of the calls that greeted America after one of the most bitterly contested presidential elections in recent history.
In the suit, Ariella -- bitterly, we presume -- points out Miley's version hit #11 on the charts, and has 794 million Internet views.
Viewed today, erotic thrillers are bitterly cynical about gender relations; they ask us to assume the worst of both men and women.
The nation's broadband giants bitterly oppose the policy because it make it harder for them to "monetize" the personal information of consumers.
Polls give Sisolak — who's amassed a $253 million war chest — a slight edge, but the bitterly contested race is still pretty close.
Mr Ghani's opponents, particularly factions in northern Afghanistan that spearheaded opposition to the Taliban in 2001, are bitterly opposed to a deal.
In these honest – almost bitterly so — words, Aniston and Theroux imagine themselves as heroes battling attacks to their character from every angle.
Microsoft, along with other competitors including Oracle and IBM, have been complaining bitterly that the one-vendor contract process unfairly favors Amazon.
Why it matters: Whoever wins, Brazil will remain bitterly divided and too weak to fulfill its dream of becoming a global power.
A society of unruly pluralism and grudging mutual toleration hammering out one bitterly negotiated compromise after another isn't anybody's idea of perfection.
This article originally appeared on VICE Sports UK. It was a bitterly cold January evening at Anfield, and the atmosphere was fierce.
Pollution alerts are common in northern China, especially during bitterly cold winters when energy demand, much of it met by coal, soars.
As Western pressure for trading rights and treaty ports grew, younger samurai bitterly criticised the military government for giving in to it.
Faced with a bitterly divided left, many floating voters have turned to a conservative alliance that presents a slightly more united front.
Hillary Clinton, Trump's opponent in the bitterly contested 2016 election and a member of one of America's handful of powerful political clans.
EU states would have to share out legitimate asylum seekers from the centers, an idea that has divided them bitterly since 2015.
But the PD, which had a disastrous election, is bitterly split and has so far refused even to talk to the M5S.
It leaves Russia's political and cultural intelligentsia bitterly divided over a man many held up as a brave model of individual resistance.
This conceit is part and parcel of Game of Thrones' bitterly cynical thoughts on human nature, both in book and TV form.
Polls give Sisolak — who's amassed a roughly $22016 million war chest — the edge, but the bitterly contested race is still pretty close.
Darcy noted that there are "competing interests" within the pro-Trump media, mirroring the bitterly divided state of the Trump White House.
The government remains bitterly divided following a high-tension impeachment inquiry, pinning Democrats and Republicans — both congresspeople and civilians — against each other.
The result, which the opposition is calling fraudulent, promises to make Turkey less democratic, more bitterly divided and more religious than ever.
It could also fuel demands by Kurds in Syria and in Turkey for greater autonomy, a prospect that Turkish officials bitterly oppose.
In an attention-grabbing moment, athletes from the British island territory of Bermuda sported, yes, Bermuda shorts at the bitterly cold ceremony.
Such action also likely would wreak havoc on the Senate's ability to legislate over the next few years as Democrats bitterly retaliate.
Two hours before the September rate move was announced, Erdogan bitterly criticized the central bank for taking "wrong steps" to address inflation.
During the winter I slept in a sleeping bag on the darkroom floor because the rest of the loft was bitterly cold.
Democrats bitterly protested that Republicans were simply looking for an excuse to deny Obama a Supreme Court nominee that was rightfully his.
After two years of bitterly partisan debate on health reform, Congress appears poised to unite on a response to the opioid epidemic.
On a bitterly cold day in late January, I knocked on the door of a home in Louisville, Kentucky's Camp Taylor neighborhood.
Sporadic clear skies and shining sun are particularly deceiving — and dressing for their lies will only leave you disappointed and bitterly cold.
Indeed, in recent months public opinion has shifted on how to handle the migrant influx, and the country is now bitterly divided.
They think they deserve to wield that power over the rest of us deplorables, bitterly clinging to the wrong side of history.
The Soviet state had used force in Azerbaijan, Georgia and Lithuania, killing scores of people and bitterly disappointing all who wanted change.
It isn't just wealthy New Jersey suburbs that bitterly resist fair housing, keeping Jim Crow's spirit alive in the New York region.
The president is also the strongest adhesive holding Democrats together after five months of bitterly fought primary and caucus contests between Mrs.
Mr. Castro also has a daughter, Alina, a radio host in Miami, who bitterly attacked her father on the air for years.
She stood and backed away, apologizing, saying a little bitterly, Oh, it would have been a miracle if it had been true.
Broader concerns have been raised over the potential for violence over an election in which Brexit is such a bitterly divisive issue.
Many of those in the crowd have been turning out every Saturday throughout the bitterly cold winter to call for Park's ouster.
Arrayed against them are the capital's self-declared government and allied militias that have bitterly opposed the United Nations-led peace process.
Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif has also bitterly complained about what he sees as European efforts to appease a mercurial U.S. leader.
Her Conservatives are bitterly divided, consumed by infighting, while the opposition Labour Party keeps its head down, hoping to exploit the chaos.
Mr. Trump and his advisers have complained bitterly about that system, arguing that it can reward fabricated or unfounded claims of vulnerability.
As Hollywood has bitterly learned, it is a whole lot easier to preach when the monster is not one of your own.
Bache was vulnerable, having been squeezed by a silver-market gamble, but its managers bitterly fought the Belzbergs' demands for board seats.
Last week, one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit, Hole's lead singer, Courtney Love, spoke bitterly of UMG's response to the fire.
In one bitterly ironic scene, two characters watch the interview and hope that Trump's 15 minutes of fame will be over soon.
Some executives who work at Fox's studio offices in Los Angeles have been complaining bitterly about the prospect of Disney cost-cutting.
The headline-grabbing move, rejected by the Spanish government, shows that imperial history remains bitterly divisive, on both sides of the Atlantic.
Polls give Sisolak — who's amassed a roughly $6 million war chest — the edge, but the bitterly contested race is still pretty close.
Ellison as chair would go a long way toward redressing the grievances accumulated up over months of a long, bitterly-fought primary.
Mr. Calder and Ms. Boyars's partnership broke up bitterly in the mid-1970s as his heyday as a cultural force was waning.
Emerging pretty much unscathed from a potentially treacherous meeting of a party bitterly divided over Britain's exit from the European Union, Mrs.
In the shadow of the smokestack, Nguyen Thi Thu Thien was drying shrimp on the side of the road and complaining bitterly.
The worst of this year's bitterly cold winter will affect the eastern parts of the Rockies all the way to the Appalachians.
That speedy action by an otherwise bitterly divided Congress underscored just how seriously the government is taking the threat of the coronavirus.
As his addiction took hold years earlier, he would joke bitterly to friends that he wouldn't live to see his 22008th birthday.
Some states have passed laws requiring that animals have access to outdoor space, but the egg industry has bitterly opposed such rules.
After India gained independence in 1947, Kashmir has been bitterly contested by both nations, resulting in three wars and numerous other skirmishes.
The Democrat is less than two weeks removed from accepting the party's presidential nomination after a bitterly fought primary campaign against Sen.
It was the first and last meeting between the charity's leaders and government officials, and Mr. Oakley described it as bitterly contentious.
A proposal to modify a new bail law has become the latest flash point in one of Albany's most bitterly fought debates.
While the Clinton impeachment was a bitterly divisive moment in our history, I did what I believed — and still believe — was right.
But his family was bitterly opposed to their relationship because she was part Native American," Warren, D-Massachusetts, told "Meet the Press.
Some wept bitterly as they spoke of the loss of a loving man and urged the judge to take a hard line.
Mr. de Blasio has also maintained a very close relationship with the city's teachers union, which bitterly opposed Mr. Bloomberg's school closings.
That behavior was exemplified by Trump's tweet last week attacking former US Ambassador to the Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch in bitterly personal terms.
The judge's supporters say she is no crusader, but an inexperienced judge who stumbled into a bitterly contested area of the law.
"The war on drugs has become a war on drunks," Mr. Panis said bitterly, days after his release from an overcrowded cell.
President Ghani, who was declared the winner of a bitterly disputed vote, had announced that he was going ahead with his inauguration.
His popularity in Zimbabwe reflects the fact that in a country bitterly divided by political allegiances, he positioned himself as a unifier.
Some of us protested bitterly against this policy turn, arguing that a period of mass unemployment was no time for fiscal austerity.
This season, even in a bitterly contentious time, the storyteller has once again done the key work of fashioning cooperation among us.
When Pete offhandedly says that Mr. Trump could ruin the country, a bar patron (Kurt Metzger) argues bitterly that that's exactly the point.
Temer was Rousseff's vice president since her first term began in January 2011, and they bitterly broke at the beginning of the year.
Obama defeated Hillary Clinton in a bitterly fought 2008 primary race, Bill Clinton wanted Obama to personally ask for the former president's endorsement.
By the 1970s, these restrictions had become bitterly controversial, bringing opprobrium on the sports teams fielded by Brigham Young University, a Mormon institution.
A protracted court battle could follow, and if this recent poll is any indication, the country will remain bitterly divided over that fight.
Rodriguez was among around 15 EPA employees protesting the shutdown during a union rally on a bitterly cold Thursday morning in New York.
The justices threw out a ruling by the Alabama Supreme Court in a dispute between two women whose long-term relationship ended bitterly.
Regardless, America ended up with a deal that both Reid and Obama publicly supported even while their staffs were complaining bitterly about it.
The two have been feuding bitterly over the $18 billion sale, particularly after Toshiba chose a different consortium as it is preferred bidder.
"What do you want to write, to give advice to others not to be like him?" his sister said bitterly over the phone.
Big banks continue to be a sensitive issue within the Democratic Party, which was bitterly divided over the May legislation, and among voters.
Residents of some of the coldest areas in Alberta and Saskatchewan have reported cracking glass windows due to the bitterly cold air temperatures.
Meanwhile, the British public remains bitterly divided over Brexit, while struggling with the same left-right and urban-rural divides that America faces.
Talking with the people opened my eyes: Lawyers, former officials and academics complained bitterly of the embargo and saw no end in sight.
"They both believed at all times they were acting in good faith and are bitterly disappointed the jury saw it differently," Warren said.
During the Obama administration, many congressional Democrats complained bitterly that Republicans were willing to shut down the federal government to win budgetary concessions.
But, as Sicilians all too bitterly know, Italy is not just a sunny place where the treasures of the past are calmly displayed.
At a time when the country is so bitterly divided, this bill demonstrates that real progress can be made through bipartisanship and compromise.
But just as some southerners view his repositioning of the League with great suspicion, so some party veterans bitterly regret the new strategy.
After the bitterly fought and divisive primary in New York last week, she didn't mention Sanders at rallies she held over the weekend.
Inside Venezuela, the government and opposition are at each other's throats, bitterly divided over the future of the oil-rich South American nation.
The trading community, which has bitterly complained for years about low trading volumes and low volatility, finally has something to cheer about: volatility.
These two pundits want liberals to help heal a bitterly divided nation by softening their rhetoric about Republicans, even die-hard Trump supporters.
The 47-year-old Chicu briefly served as finance minister under Sandu's predecessor, former Prime Minister Pavel Filip, whose government she bitterly opposed.
Her nomination has been bitterly controversial thanks to her involvement in the agency's detention and interrogation program in the years following Sept. 11.
In the last century it has, surely against its own wishes, proved bitterly prescient about the way of the world again and again.
The pair have bitterly feuded following a number of controversial claims from Manigault Newman's new book detailing her time in the White House.
And he was said to be bitterly disappointed when Mr. Trump's children and campaign manager prevailed on the candidate to instead choose Gov.
He also complained bitterly about Brenda's presence in the apartment, blaming her for Ms. Irizarry's condition and threatening to kill her, friends said.
One thing most voters shared was an overriding sense of disgust, even if they were split bitterly over which candidate repelled them more.
Today, he is weighing many of the same factors, and facing down a Congress more bitterly divided than any he has ever seen.
And the upbeat, inclusive manner Kasich has exhibited on the campaign trail may be the only balm for a bitterly divided Republican electorate.
Hunched over a laptop at a downtown Toronto club on a bitterly cold January night, Bambii threw the at-capacity crowd a curveball.
"We saw some really strong earnings this week," Bitterly told CNN Business' Alison Kosik during CNN Business' "Markets Now" live show on Thursday.
But economic factors may no longer matter as much in a bitterly emotional political age, and leader approval ratings have continued to fall.
The ruling, after years of escalating battles over voter identification laws, gerrymanders and voter purges, left Democrats and voting rights advocates bitterly disappointed.
Mr. Lambert did not leave written instructions about his end-of-life wishes, and his family has been bitterly divided over his treatment.
I worry that our children and grandchildren will one day ask us, bitterly, why we spent so much time distracted by lesser matters.
"If someone had ever told me I would one day live like this, I would've laughed," Mr. Taymouri said bitterly, before falling silent.
It was a bitterly cold afternoon: Officials had delivered a frostbite warning and black ice had developed on several roads throughout the city.
The administration, which has bitterly complained that Congress has not addressed the issue, has been pressing the Mexican government for months to help.
Republicans in Roy Moore's home state voiced firm support for his Senate bid, putting them publicly and bitterly at odds with top Republicans.
They complained bitterly that Perriello had spent so much time recently outside the state before coming back to run for its highest office.
Going through my mind was a recent National Geographic article quoting a doctor who noted that bitterly frigid temperatures can cause mental confusion.
Figuring out how to pay for tax cuts is always a grueling task, but it is especially complicated in today's bitterly partisan atmosphere.
Tom Vilsack of Iowa, who served as agriculture secretary in the Obama administration, complained bitterly about his party's worsening struggles with rural voters.
Mr. DeSantis ultimately won the governorship by a tiny margin, but Mr. Trump criticized him bitterly in the final days of the race.
Some politicians have accused Mr. Maassen of eroding trust in the government at a time when the country is bitterly divided over migration.
In the 1990s, web browsers like Netscape Navigator and Microsoft Internet Explorer competed bitterly to offer the snazziest new features and attract users.
In her memory, after the first bitterly cold night, the days blend together, something Holocaust scholars say is common among those who survived.
Yet she's an official representative of the U.S. government at a time when the country is bitterly split along political and racial lines.
Yet despite a bitterly divided Congress, a massive spending bill passed late last year includes $25 million for federal research into gun violence.
I am bitterly disappointed by the news that Pope Francis will not be relaxing priestly celibacy rules in remote parts of the Amazon.
The day they had to be out was bitterly cold, but Arleen knew what would happen if she waited any longer to leave.
Over the last year, a number of musicians and music industry groups have complained bitterly about what they call YouTube's unfairly low payouts.
Those who are chosen will be the face of the prosecution of Trump, a president they have fought bitterly for nearly three years.
What does it matter if inequality rises, faith in institutions plummets, social trust declines, government becomes dysfunctional and our society is bitterly divided?
In 2008, 3 percent were — during a bitterly fought Democratic primary when Democrats had good reason to weigh in on their own party.
Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, having prevailed in Iowa, teased Mr. Trump for having attacked him bitterly on the way to an embarrassing loss.
Watch: Here's how much Americans bitterly disagree about the Mueller probe Just because it's probably legal doesn't mean it's not troubling for legal experts.
The couple join a second line parade in their honor as the other women look down bitterly upon them from their hotel room window.
Millions of people were bracing Monday for a week of hazardous conditions from bitterly cold temperatures and a snowstorm that already caused travel chaos.
Today, when you walk through town, as I did one bitterly cold morning this past February, you wouldn't know it had once been segregated.
The immigration agents came for Alex Lora the week before Thanksgiving in November 2521, on what he recalls was a bitterly cold Friday morning.
There was no one—and especially not a loved one—this bitterly derisive teen couldn't cut down a peg with her hatchet-like quips.
Bitterly disappointed by Mr Trump's decision to quit the TPP, Japan happens to have been negotiating a trade deal with the EU since 2013.
The American public is bitterly divided with or without Russian trolls, and it's unclear how much influence these accounts actually have on US politics.
The vote was triggered by disgruntled hardline Tory Brexiteers bitterly opposed to the Brexit deal that Mrs May has negotiated with the European Union.
But Alaska in late fall is bitterly cold, and frozen asphalt can take a week or longer to melt into a sticky, pliable material.
One of his first tasks will be to try to heal a bitterly divided party that has a parliamentary majority of only one seat.
Wednesday's summit was hosted by Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan who has bitterly criticized the United States, a NATO ally, for its stance on Jerusalem.
With opinion polls tight and his Conservative party bitterly divided on Europe, many believe Cameron aims to hold the referendum sooner rather than later.
But many were unreassured by his words, with several questioners describing themselves as "refugees" or "orphans" after the 'Brexit' vote which bitterly divided Britain.
In this telling Eisenhower tried to duck the moral force of the Brown decision and was said to bitterly regret his appointment of Warren.
Just like that other young leader Napoleon, Macron inherits a country that is bitterly divided and mired in problems that have endured for years.
In the decades after the Depression economists argued, sometimes bitterly, over how to build on the ideas of John Maynard Keynes, macroeconomics' founding intellect.
As the 211th anniversary of the horrific attacks approaches Sunday, the political world is bitterly divided on how to address terrorism and national security.
Most of the cutters are farmers from nearby villages who start work before dawn at bitterly low temperatures to earn about $35 per day.
Otherwise traders were still waiting to see whether UK Prime Minister Theresa May can push her Brexit plans through the country's bitterly divided parliament.
Islamic State, which is bitterly opposed by the Taliban, said it carried out the Kabul attack but Zabihullah Mujahid dismissed the claim as "rubbish".
Many bitterly recalled the ease with which about 800 Islamic State militants seized control in a few hours, as thousands of Iraqi soldiers fled.
After a primary campaign that left the party bitterly divided, Trump has struggled to find an attack line that fellow Republicans can rally behind.
Sirisena, who unseated former leader Mahinda Rajapaksa in a bitterly contested poll last year, promised a new constitution to strengthen democracy and fundamental rights.
But the superheroes are bitterly divided on how, and whether, to draw on this ability, "because it can be flawed and abused," he said.
Though governments and newspapers complained bitterly about the price of Sovaldi, few thought twice about paying $35,000 annually for lifetime cost of treating HIV.
Jeff Merkley blamed Democratic leadership for the $4.6 billion humanitarian aid package Congress passed last week that was bitterly opposed by many progressive Democrats.
The issue has bitterly divided Republicans, but nearly all Democrats favor holding the debate and had signed the petition as of late last month.
In 1985, the year he left for Paris, Adonis published "The Book of Siege," a bitterly valedictory poem for his home of three decades.
In 2500, Judge Martin wrote for the majority in a bitterly divided United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in Grutter v.
"Bitterly divided" may not capture fully the extreme viciousness of the war raging in this country, in which everything but hot lead is flying.
Proud to be wearing his hair in an Afro, he spoke bitterly of how the government had not allowed Oromos to practice their culture.
Last month's ruling by the Justice Department has to do with one of the most complex — and most bitterly disputed — issues in music copyright.
I learned, bitterly, during my almost six years in the department, how hard it was to resist this culture, to do the right thing.
A bitterly split Congress, for instance, could come up with no reasonable replacement for the Iran Deal following the president's decision to pull out.
Late on a bitterly cold January night, we met for warm drinks at an Upper West Side haunt a few blocks from the theater.
The two fought bitterly during the 2016 GOP presidential primary, and the former Florida governor never endorsed Trump once he became the party's nominee.
At 1.3 percentage points, she has built a lead not seen in a losing campaign since Rutherford B. Hayes's bitterly disputed election of 1876.
When American Airlines agreed to give raises to its pilots and flight attendants in April, analysts at a handful of investment banks reacted bitterly.
Now that the party has bitterly opposed the ACA for nearly a decade, it's difficult to propose ideas that bear any resemblance to it.
Saudi officials may bitterly object, but those who are fighting for real reform inside the kingdom need this ultimatum to win out over hardliners.
This year, Bitterly said she expects that growth to slow to about 8%, which she added is still strong for an extended bull market.
It's a name that is bitterly ironic for Iranian women, who have not been allowed inside the stadium since the Islamic revolution of 1979.
Some commenters bitterly noted that the manipulation required financial resources beyond the means of most contestants, though not out of reach for Mikella's parents.
Mr. Trump complains bitterly that Mr. Powell is going to turn him into Herbert Hoover by doing what the Fed is mandated to do.
Donald Trump and Ted Cruz will be in the same building for the first time since the two fought bitterly over their wives' honor.
Warren has an additional week to try to woo her colleagues in a bitterly divided Washington to include her proposals in a response package.
"I am enough," I would snarl bitterly upon realizing the truth, unable to shake the feeling that, without friends or community, I really wasn't.
A cool gray morning turns into a bright but bitterly cold afternoon, with temperatures falling through the 20s and a lunchtime windchill around 15.
I think Lara Axelrod has it right when she bitterly instructs a friend — er, "friend" — who is considering a divorce not to do it.
I'm referring to remarks by that city's Democratic mayor, Mitch Landrieu, upon his removal of the last of several bitterly contested Confederate monuments there.
After Prime Minister Theresa May complained bitterly to President Trump, he denounced the leaks on Thursday and vowed to find and punish the leakers.
But Israelis complain bitterly that this evacuation showed that pulling back from settlements does not work: Militant groups, including Hamas, fired rockets into Israel.
But smog levels spike in the bitterly cold winters, especially in poor "ger" neighborhoods, named after the felt tents in which many migrants live.
More companies from across the corporate spectrum are joining a long-shot advocacy effort to pass a carbon tax in a bitterly divided Congress.
It is linked to increased interpersonal conflict with friends and family, and grandstanding-fueled moral arms races polarize us into bitterly divided political camps.
Many presidents, of course, have complained bitterly behind closed doors about their treatment at the hands of the news media or their political opponents.
Britain: The lower house of Parliament, once bitterly divided over Brexit, gave the green light to legislation set to go in effect on Jan.
Britain officially leaves the European Union on Friday after a debilitating political period that has bitterly divided the nation since the 2016 Brexit referendum.
It set off a scramble in Washington's intelligence and law enforcement agencies to contain the fallout, but investigators were bitterly divided over the cause.
Is President Trump beginning to move away from the bitterly divisive partisanship that dominated his campaign and defined his first seven months in office?
The two fought bitterly in the 22000s over a real estate development Mr. Trump sought to build on the Upper West Side of Manhattan.
When they arrived, the Clintons found a lot of raw nerve endings among the moneyed elite, who were bitterly divided following Bush v. Gore.
And so the council in a narrow and very bitterly divided vote, I think 5-4, voted it through, but I couldn't sign it.
"That does not bode well for future presidents who are working in a country often sharply and, at times, bitterly divided," he will add.
Cohen told the House Oversight Committee that he now bitterly regrets he blindly took that role, which will ultimately deprive him of his freedom.
Since casting her vote, she said she's been "bitterly disappointed" by the president, but sidestepped questions of whether she would support Trump in 2020.
She knows a prolonged, bitterly partisan impeachment fight — with no chance for an eventual conviction in the Senate — may redound to Donald Trump's advantage.
Saturday's survey, conducted by Demos & PI for La Repubblica newspaper, suggested the move, which left gay rights groups bitterly disappointed, reflected the majority view.
I've personally worn Columbia hats in driving snow, on 15,000-foot mountains, and in bitterly cold windstorms, and I've yet to be let down.
One moment I was bitterly cursing into my mittens, in line behind another hundred grumpy individuals huddling away from the biting West Coast wind.
On Wednesday, he struck a different tone, posting on Twitter to praise Mr. McConnell for shepherding the tax bill through the bitterly divided chamber.
Harbaugh blasted the officiating after the Wolverines' 30-27 double-overtime loss in Columbus, Ohio, saying he was "bitterly disappointed" during a lengthy rant.
"Bitterly disappointed by initial Bombardier ruling," said British Prime Minister Theresa May, who had personally asked U.S. President Donald Trump to help resolve the dispute.
But the city is home to a thriving subculture of surfers who endure long subway rides and bitterly cold water just to catch a wave.
Now, Whitaker "can put those opinions into practice while the President himself bitterly attempts to undermine public confidence in the investigation almost daily," Goldstein wrote.
The agreement laid out plans for a power-sharing government, as a result despite having bitterly opposing politics, Sinn Fein and the DUP share power.
On Sunday, a Turkish army reconnaissance team scouted the Idlib province before an expected military operation to impose peace in the bitterly contested Syrian northwest.
"It is almost as if Pakistan is a Chinese proxy-state — the Chinese can do whatever they want, to whomever they want," Khan said, bitterly.
If immigrants are indeed guilty of incurable intolerance, many liberal Europeans who currently favour immigration will sooner or later come round to oppose it bitterly.
The residents of the small village of Umm al-Hiran, whose 1,000 residents are Palestinian citizens of Israel, tasted the continuing Nakba bitterly last week.
Mr Dodd's inscription notes that more than twice as many locals fought for the Union as for the Confederacy, about which townsfolk still talk bitterly.
The unraveling of the weekslong occupation, especially the fatal shooting of one protester by the police, has bitterly divided the small town of Burns nearby.
I was writing an article about a village that had bitterly split over the question of whether women should be allowed to work in factories.
But it's worth watching not just for its bitterly entertaining explanation of a densely confusing matter but also the way it illustrates a larger problem.
He went on to complain bitterly about McGregor's behavior in the lead-up to the fight that exacerbated the bad blood between the two teams.
"For an hour, Monica screamed, she cried, she pouted, and complained bitterly about her scheming, no-good, so-called friend," he writes, according to NPR.
Large parts of northern China suffer from chronic smog during the bitterly cold winters because much of the heating demand is still met by coal.
The center-right parties have split bitterly over who to back in the capital, which is considered an important test for Prime Minister Matteo Renzi.
In Mianwali Qureshian, Bakhtyar's ancestral home in south Punjab, children trudge barefoot through the village, while residents bitterly complain about lack of clean drinking water.
Stokes' father, who lives in New Zealand's South Island city of Christchurch, said he was thrilled for his son but bitterly disappointed for New Zealand.
Unions fought it bitterly, and investors were spooked by swings in the value of Brazil's currency, bureaucratic delays and a Rio de Janeiro oil spill.
Taiwan is an island bitterly divided over a moment which should have made it a shining light for LGBTQ rights in an increasingly repressive region.
"There comes a day in every child's life when his Daddy bitterly disappoints him," former Breitbart News editor Milo Yiannopoulos wrote in a Facebook post.
Saudi officials recall bitterly how Iran provided senior al Qaeda figures shelter after 9/11, even as the terror group launched attacks across the kingdom.
Many prominent U.S. politicians — including Trump — have struggled to explain why they did not serve in the Vietnam War, which bitterly divided the United States.
But the plan has bitterly divided the European Union since an outline agreement with Russian gas export monopoly Gazprom was signed in September last year.
Bitterly cold air "soaked up the pollution and held it like a blanket over the city" for four days straight, according to the Daily Mail.
Nichols finds the irony and faint ludicrousness of their situation in various ways, as when Mildred's sister bitterly scolds Richard for marrying his pregnant girlfriend.
The action in the Senate was a sign that even in a bitterly contentious election year, compromise is still possible, at least in that chamber.
"You can think of death bitterly or with resignation ... and take every possible measure to postpone it," she offers at the beginning of the book.
This works to Negan's favor, as he prefers his enemies bend the knee and serve the Saviors rather than fight bitterly to the very end.
The couple met on a bitterly cold evening in Washington in February 2013, when she bumped into a mutual friend who was with Mr. Healy.
Come to think of it, one of those alternatives is exactly what we are living through right now, and it has bitterly divided the country.
Drama does erupt fitfully in "Mirrored Heart," as she sings bitterly about unreciprocated love, but then it vanishes, leaving her quietly bereft at the end.
Yet, in a region some locals bitterly call "the other Connecticut," there are signs that the sluggish recovery has left some voters open to persuasion.
It was late December, and bitterly cold, and he figured that the weather would bring fewer shootings than usual but more cases of domestic abuse.
For that matter, the founders who wrote the Constitution had no earthly idea the nation's capital would one day become so bitterly divided by party.
Its distributor is part of a trade association bitterly fighting proposed legislation that would empower the Food and Drug Administration to test and recall cosmetics.
That has ignited an election-year fight between insurers and consumers, who are complaining bitterly about the double-digit increases being sought across the country.
While D.C. remains bitterly divided over a range of policy areas, protections of religious liberties continue to garner support from both sides of the aisle.
The Kremlin was bitterly opposed to the enlargement of NATO, which has taken in nine former members of the Soviet-led Warsaw Pact, including Poland.
In a bitterly divided country, it's inevitable that any newly elected president will roll out some big new initiatives that his opponent regards as malign.
The high court in its June 2012 ruling, however, upheld the law in a controversial, bitterly fought opinion by Roberts, based on Congress' taxing power.
In fairness to Mr. Obama, Republicans in Congress bitterly opposed his public works spending plans, and he lamented there were too few "shovel ready" projects.
If investors are concerned about volatility or a market pullback, Bitterly urged people to hedge their bets by investing in health care and technology stocks.
Should it be a haven for free speech and diverse ideas, or take a stand against a strain of politics that many residents bitterly oppose?
In some cases, these challengers raise the threat of bitterly contested midterm primaries that could leave House and Senate nominees weakened for the general election.
The parliament and public that once rallied around Mr. Sirisena are now bitterly divided over what his critics call an unconstitutional attempt to consolidate power.
The remainders of Simicska's media empire attacked Orbán bitterly in the 2018 campaign, trying to build up the far-right Jobbik party as an alternative.
Rick Plowman 66, complained bitterly about how despite having Medicare, he had to pay nearly $500 for inhalers to treat his chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
The UK is deeply and bitterly divided on how it should exit the EU, and what its future relationship with the bloc should look like.
That made it all the more bitterly awful that much of it was written by Louis C.K., who has since admitted to committing sexual misconduct.
The Giants complained bitterly after the play that Eagles safety Corey Graham had held Engram's left arm and should have been called for pass interference.
ISPs like Comcast, AT&T, and Verizon—along with their GOP allies—bitterly oppose Title II, which they call an egregious example of regulatory overreach.
The Hecklers' marriage of 31 years ended publicly and bitterly in 1984 after Mr. Heckler, the founder of a Boston stock brokerage, filed for divorce.
Ms. Arnstein had just been convicted of conspiracy to distribute cocaine, and Mr. Hefner said bitterly that investigators had hounded her to set him up.
Although whoever it is, we will twitter bitterly about how much better it would be if whatsername from Montana hadn't gotten such a raw deal.
It seems likely that Amazon would face enormous political backlash, especially from President Donald Trump, who has complained bitterly about companies moving jobs to Mexico.
Visit CNN's Election Center for full coverage of the 2020 race The party has been bitterly divided over health care throughout the primary campaign. Sens.
In Nanni Balestrini's 1971 novel "We Want Everything," the life of a southern émigré turned Fiat worker reflects bitterly on the conditions of the factories.
Mr. Trump, who loves to claim that he has outdone his predecessors, noted that several past presidents had "tried and bitterly failed" to achieve peace.
He is backed by Gerindra, the opposition party of Prabowo Subianto, a former general who lost the bitterly fought 2014 presidential election to Mr. Joko.
Senior F.B.I. officials believed there was never going to be a good outcome, since it put them in the middle of a bitterly partisan issue.
The leadership race is likely to be bitterly fought between candidates from Corbyn&aposs wing of the party and those on Labour&aposs "soft left".
President Trump has bitterly complained about leaks in the Russia probe, suggesting the investigation had created a false narrative about his campaign and early administration.
The Trumps, with the aid of Roy Cohn — Trump's all-purpose lawyer and counselor — bitterly fought the Justice Department, but in 1975 the company settled.
Partisans in this culture struggle have sorted themselves ideologically into two parties that are now devolving into bitterly opposed enemy factions in the 1860 model.
They see the network as neutral, independent, without slant, or bias — and yet a given hour can showcase some of the most bitterly partisan views.
Mr. William, who intends to vote for former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., spoke bitterly about his experiences with socialism growing up in Guyana.
What three nations bitterly criticized Russia — Syria's main ally in the six-year-old war — for objecting to a resolution they drafted condemning the attack?
Obviously, the nomination is going to be bitterly fought no matter who comes out on top in the February contests in Iowa and New Hampshire.
But it was in France that the law was bitterly fought over before it passed, and that it became a test of certain politicians' modernism.
Back and forth McDonagh goes, with Mag whining about the lumps in her food and Maureen chafing bitterly against her mother's manipulations, but nothing changes.
The ballot initiative, which was bitterly opposed by the Republican Party and powerful corporate interests, was approved by about 61 percent of voters in 2018.
Even if that military standoff is resolved peacefully, China and India have a lot to talk about — not just about their bitterly contested border claims.
He is backed by Gerindra, which is led by Prabowo Subianto, a former general who lost the bitterly fought 2014 presidential election to Mr. Joko.
No doubt some American workers are bitterly angry and moved by Donald Trump's trade rhetoric after having repeatedly been promised great gains from "trade" agreements.
Democrats, meanwhile, were bitterly remembering that last year Barack Obama had nominated an intelligent, well-spoken moderate moderate in the form of Judge Merrick Garland.
"Britain is already bitterly divided over Brexit, and more than it has been on anything for generations," Mr. Featherstone wrote in an email on Sunday.
Yet confronting Iran has become a bitterly partisan issue, with Republicans typically preferring a more aggressive stance while Democrats tend to prefer a diplomatic approach.
But at the height of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh's bitterly contested Senate confirmation fight, Coons has become one of the Senate's most important players.
The president faces a year in which a bitterly divided Congress and a swirling Russia scandal could rob him of any high-profile legislative successes.
Clinton has largely remained out of the public eye since losing a bitterly fought campaign against the former reality star and businessman in the November vote.
Voting intention surveys have illustrated how deeply Spain's political system is torn between five parties as the country heads in to a bitterly fought parliamentary election.
We went to check it out back in October and we left bitterly disappointed that magic really truly doesn't exist — but the exhibition itself was fantastic.
The issue of how to handle migrants has bitterly split the EU, although arrivals are down dramatically from their 2015 peak of more than a million.
During a bitterly angry press conference Tuesday, he blamed the weekend's events on "both sides," effectively drawing a moral equivalence between white supremacists and counter-protestors.
Islamic State is bitterly opposed to the wealthy Gulf kingdom's Sunni Muslim rulers, whom it regards as having betrayed Islam through close ties with the West.
In all three, the electorate was bitterly divided and the margin of victory was narrow (Donald Trump lost the popular vote but won the electoral college).
Congress bitterly decries the consolidation of power to the president — the House even created a Task Force on Executive Overreach — but this damage is self-inflicted.
LA PAZ, Bolivia — An elections court threw a new wrinkle into Bolivia's bitterly disputed presidential election on Thursday, ordering a revote in four places because irregularities.
Without this atmosphere, conditions on Earth would be more like the Moon, which is scorching hot (+203℃) during the day and bitterly cold (-150℃) at night.
It's the kind of thing that frequently happens in our democracy, stretching back to the bitterly fought contests that involved the Founding Fathers and their successors.
The President bickered bitterly with reporters, mocked his enemies with juvenile nicknames, twisted the facts of his own conduct and bemoaned how unfairly he'd been treated.
Obama on Thursday said the longer the high court goes without a full roster of justices, the higher the likelihood of the court becoming bitterly politicized.
Democrats could be looking at an elections bump after the bitterly fought battle to confirm Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh — a bump propelled by women voters.
Shaun Harris, Ms. Dhu's uncle and family spokesperson, told Mashable he was bitterly disappointed by Twitter's actions after he noticed the account was suspended on Saturday.
It singled out the Washington-based Organization of American States, which has been bitterly critical of Maduro, for what it called attempts to undermine Venezuela's sovereignty.
In the U.K., where Brexit will be "the defining event for the country for decades to come," both the Conservative and Labour parties are bitterly divided.
"Some people have suggested that we could get $19883 million," she said matter-of-factly, as she showed off the land on a bitterly cold afternoon.
Much has been said (bitterly, at times) about how The Last Jedi appears to insist that everything past generations loved about Star Wars has to die.
Ted Cruz, sharing a stage with a member of the Trump family for the first time since clashed bitterly with candidate Trump during the GOP primaries.
The 45-year-old's first task will be to unite a bitterly divided party, which he promised to do in his victory speech late on Sunday.
Michael Wainwright, managing director at London luxury jeweler Boodles, said he, like many people living in the capital, had been bitterly disappointed by the Brexit vote.
A different but safe land On a bitterly cold and foggy afternoon in early January, Muna and Mohammed drove down Highway 5 to the Lethbridge airport.
IT IS part of the world's most sensitive piece of religious real estate, and the locus of some bitterly intractable disputes over sacred history and heritage.
In the post-Arab-Spring world, the region became bitterly divided between the countries that rejected the premise of cataclysmic change and those that welcomed it.
They still need support from 14 opposition politicians to put a new constitution to referendum or 50 votes to push it through a bitterly polarized parliament.
One is where major elements of the party feel so intensely and so bitterly about one issue that they oppose him no matter what the consequences.
They bitterly noted that Mr. Erdan's plan was announced only after Nashat Melhem, an Arab-Israeli, opened fire on bar patrons in Tel Aviv on Jan.
Placing his last hopes in the Party rank and file, he ran a hard campaign in the Wisconsin primary, got trounced, and bitterly quit the race.
The 70-year-old, U.S.-trained former World Bank official came to power in 2014 after winning a bitterly disputed election marred by accusations of cheating.
"The final product is the work of both campaigns," he said — a clear sign of thawing relations between the two after a bitterly fought nominating contest.
Kavanaugh has staunchly denied the claim against him while already agreeing to appear before the committee for a second time following his bitterly partisan confirmation hearing.
The developments signaled the further deterioration of relations between the United States and Russia, which are now bitterly at odds over Syria, Ukraine and other issues.
He was a classic Great English Teacher in the Dead Poets Society tradition, encouraging his students to think originally while bitterly criticizing the school's uptight administrators.
Though, should the WBA not deliver as expected, this will return boxing fans to the familiar position of being promised plenty, but ultimately left bitterly disappointed.
Editorial The bitterly fought presidential campaign has underscored yet again that conservative and liberal Americans are deeply divided on just about every aspect of social policy.
" Although US stocks are doing well, Bitterly said people should diversify their portfolios by putting money into foreign stocks, where she said there are "tremendous opportunities.
The region has extremely high savings rates, Bitterly notes, and about 88% of the growth in the global middle class is expected to come from Asia.
Some DVMT shareholders — including Carl C. Icahn, the billionaire who bitterly fought Mr. Dell's 2013 deal to take his company private — may fight for more money.
He's a sensitive soul, at times bitterly cynical, at times charmingly naïve, always courteous, in the grip of a desperate compulsion to own nothing at all.
Etowah County, the largely rural slice of northeast Alabama where Mr. Moore was raised and currently lives, was bitterly divided about Mr. Moore before the allegations.
R. T. Rybak, the former Minneapolis mayor who was vice chairman of the Democratic National Committee in 2016, complained bitterly about the party's tilt toward Mrs.
May's attempt, scheduled for next week, to win support from her bitterly divided cabinet for a long-awaited white paper on future relations with the bloc.
North Korea has bitterly protested the annual military exercises staged by South Korea and the United States military, which Pyongyang views as a rehearsal for invasion.
But the truth is that her persona is mostly a myth concocted by a media unable to grasp the new reality of a bitterly divided politics.
Germany, Europe's austerity enforcer, has clashed bitterly with the International Monetary Fund over whether to ease up on Greece to help it cross the finish line.
In a message posted to her official Twitter account on Wednesday, Ms. May pronounced herself "bitterly disappointed" by the Bombardier case, which was brought by Boeing.
Mook was checking in with Plouffe daily — sometimes multiple times a day — during Clinton's narrow and bitterly won victory in the Iowa caucuses, they told me.
It must be especially sweet for Putin, the former KGB officer who bitterly watched the West triumph from his post in Dresden as East Germany dissolved.
Across the street from City Hall, dozens of police officers separated a few dozen Trump supporters from the protesters as they shouted bitterly at one another.
Bitter cold will follow the storm Behind the system, bitterly cold temperatures will settle in for the end of the weekend and start of the week.
The plan appears to have fairly broad support in an EU now bitterly split over immigration policy, although countries have yet to settle on the details.
There is something deeply moody, bitterly romantic, and ultimately poignant about Crowley's circuitous path through life, seeming always to snatch obscurity from the jaws of recognition.
Former Georgian president Mikheil Saakashvili launched a new political party in Ukraine on Friday to fight corruption, just days after resigning bitterly as a regional governor.
Seldom does a day go by when you don't hear people bitterly complaining about how much trouble it is to muffle the sound of their shooting.
Cross-country divisions embodied in a bitterly divided Congress – fuelled by arguments over impeachment and migration, risk turning what were once local quirks into irreconcilable differences.
The San Bernardino case was bitterly contested by the government and Apple until a private company came forward with a way to break into the phone.
Democrats fought bitterly in 2008 and 2009 over the inclusion of a "public option" in ObamaCare, intended to lower costs by competing with private insurance companies.
Winters in upstate New York and Ontario can be bitterly cold, and significant portions of the surface of the falls have frozen over more than once.
Though often bitterly divided along ideological and partisan lines, lawmakers from both sides say a bipartisan flood insurance reform bill is both essential and within reach.
Bitterly cold temperatures in the Plains and Midwest, which tends to cause livestock to slowly gain weight, is supportive for near-term cash returns, they added.
WASHINGTON — Doug Jones's defeat of Roy S. Moore in Tuesday's bitterly fought special Senate election was one of the most unlikely upsets in recent campaign history.
When Orpheus turned to look at Eurydice, sending her back to Hades (spoiler alert: it's not a happy ending), a woman sitting near us wept bitterly.
The winters are still bitterly cold along Lake Superior, the cross-country trails are still refreshed daily with falling snow, and the ice is still there.
I remember a couple winters ago, some of my 11th-grade students were waiting on public transportation in bitterly cold weather for at least an hour.

No results under this filter, show 947 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.