So, it seems, some people are very bitter indeed about the proposed sugar tax.
Writer Harry Reid said the incident left the university campus "a very bitter and divided place".
The result of this, he says, is that they can become "very bitter and twisted when they don't make it".
And while he was there he was very bored, he was very bitter, and one day he got a letter.
"It's very bitter, obviously, " she said of the austerity measures that have left some Greeks struggling to pay for food or utilities.
And it's been a very bitter fight, so it strikes me as being pretty hard to put that together at the end of the day.
The Asian crisis was a bitter, very recent memory, and choice No. 2 was big, safe and Dutch--Phillips.
It was bitter cold and very windy.
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And if Iraq policy descends, as it very well may, into a bitter wrangle between the executive and the legislature, the chances of bipartisan progress on domestic policy will look all the slimmer.
But Albania's religious balance, as well as its political equilibrium, could be upset by the influx of Kosovars who are overwhelmingly (though not very zealously) Muslim and now have bitter experience of people who claim to be acting in the name of Orthodox Christianity.
Some people experience this as intensely bitter, even when it is present at very low levels.
It is a very public play-out of two net giants who have become bitter rivals as they fail to agree on ways to share data.
In the ultra-Orthodox Hasidic Jewish community in Williamsburg, from which the Glaubers hailed, the arrest is "a sweet bitter pill to swallow because it's good news but on a very sad story, " said community leader and family friend Isaac Abraham.
That would be a bitter reverse for Mr Romney in the first rustbelt state in the Midwest to hold a primary, the very state where he grew up and where his father was a popular governor.
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