For Italy it was a day of bitter disappointment as they ran out again battered and bruised by more adept opponents. |
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It's deadlock, with only acrimonious court battles and a bitter tug-of-love to look forward to. |
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But, like Logan, we need to put aside wedge politics, personal rancor and bitter partisanship to act on behalf of the nation. |
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It's only recently and as a result of all the bitter acrimony that he realised that they can't sort it out. |
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Halve small heads of treviso, radicchio or white chicory lengthways and set aside for 5-10 minutes to allow the bitter juices to exude. |
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This would have stripped the bitter racial rancor out of the affirmative action debate. |
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Bradburne, a no-nonsense lady wearing a headscarf to protect her head from the bitter north wind, shrugs her shoulders. |
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The majority of his appointees have been approved, and they have been approved with no public rancor or bitter political warfare. |
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I know this from bitter experience when fishing from the stone jetties in the Arabian Gulf. |
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I still don't know, but the whole dish, washed down with a half of bitter, sure tasted great. |
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I'll give points for being reasonably drawn, intelligent, and the only webcomic to ever crack a smile on this old bitter man's face. |
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For the next week there was a bitter struggle for Bourlon Wood, whose whaleback mass still dominates the battlefield. |
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He would often describe his wartime experiences in caustic, funny terms that would turn bitter and rancorous. |
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Given the group's notoriously bitter and protracted split a decade ago, this was quite some achievement. |
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However, excessive grinding will cause the oils to evaporate and the coffee to taste bitter and acidic. |
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This may enhance pleasant tastes and decrease salty, bitter, or acid tastes. |
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It is medium bodied with surprisingly strong flavors, a crisp acid balance and a slightly bitter finish. |
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That's a remarkable achievement given the bitter division between those two parties. |
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To the bitter end he kept waving under her nose a brochure of their dream house across town. |
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Whatever the game or size of the ball, sport has forever been at its best when a bitter, or even friendly, rivalry is at its heart. |
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Kent endured the bitter ache of wanting to say something to Charles for a very long time. |
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I don't want him coming back here after he's out of juvie and, you know, being bitter and angry. |
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He is infamous throughout the village for his bitter temperament and quickness to anger. |
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Jaundice connotes bitterness or resentment. Of what is she bitter or resentful? What bitterness or resentment might she be urging upon us? |
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Wheatgrass juice is sweet while the juice of barley grass is rather bitter. |
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You could drink it, but it doesn't quench thirst in the least, and it has a slightly bitter taste. |
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Cricket has become another form of diplomacy, and the rivalry is friendly and no longer bitter. |
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The idea of Jesse warms my heart immensely and gives me some happiness when I otherwise would feel lonely and bitter. |
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Angry, bitter wind drove frozen rain hard into the window, rattling the panes. |
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Try to include a few slightly bitter salad leaves such as radicchio or witloof, or peppery ones such as watercress or rocket. |
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This, he reckons, is a bitter pill for Scots who quite enjoy wallowing in a perceived anti-Scottish backlash. |
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The relation between the two opposing camps was bitter and the interaction, acrimonious. |
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It was a bitter, acrimonious divorce that involved lawyers and an emotional tug-of-war over access to Leon. |
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The obvious reason is that the debates became so acrimonious and bitter, that the Generals ordered him to desist. |
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And the remaining militants appear eager to milk the crisis right to the bitter end. |
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Bitter tastes like the tastes of black coffee and beer are composed of air and ether. |
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I deliberately ignored all the warning voices inside me and enjoyed the time by his side almost until the bitter end. |
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Bitter orange peel contains synephrine, a stimulant comparable to the banned weight-loss aid ephedra. |
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Bitter orange, aristolochic acid and usnic acid are all used for weight loss. |
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And you thought I was just some bitter provincial pseudo-intellectual getting by on warmed-up Kingsley Amis with the odd dash of second-hand Foucault. |
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It has a warm energy with bitter and acrid or pungent flavors. |
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Subirer, for example, is a small bitter pear that grows in the Alps, near Lech. |
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By halftime a crowd of what appeared to be a few hundred people had amassed in the bitter cold. |
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The more acrimonious and bitter an argument or election contest appears to be, the less likely it is that anything of principle will really be at stake. |
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No one was quite sure how Pepper made it to the bitter end, except that the show's producers loved the drama she provoked. |
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Bitter melon grows in tropical areas, including parts of East Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, and South America. |
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Do they realize that karela is a bitter melon, popular from China and India to Trinidad and Vietnam? |
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For the Times, which had won four Pulitzer Prizes in 2013, the Snowden slip-up was a bitter pill to swallow. |
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However there is a bitter pill that must be recognized and accepted by all for a restructuring to be effective. |
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In a bitter four-way primary, Boyle was attacked as both pro-life and anti-public education. |
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Bitter melon has climbing foliage that resembles that of its cousin, the cucumber. |
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The Aberdonian remains intensely bitter about then Pittodrie manager Roy Aitken falsely raising his hopes of being listed as a substitute for the 2-victory over Dundee. |
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To avoid a bitter bird, try a less hoppy, more malty beer, such as a brown ale or sweet stout. |
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Bitter foods like tart red grape juice, arugula, watercress, and dandelion greens also work when you incorporate them into meals. |
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There could be as much bitter and acrimonious political argument and debate as they liked, but from now on all problems had to be resolved politically. |
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Bitter feuds between regents and mayors and their local legislative councils have often taken place in Indonesia, resulting in their removal. |
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If my broken heart was to blame, it has taken its bitter time, acting stealthily. |
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In Asturias, the cider apples are more bitter and tannic than in other regions. |
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The aughts went out like a cranky kid last night, kicking and screaming until the bitter end. |
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Pat Stephenson's heroes became the first side to bring the Tetley's Bitter Vase to North Yorkshire with a thumping 36-20 triumph. |
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If the game does go ahead Harrogate could go top of the table as their main rivals are involved in the Tetley's Bitter Cup. |
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The Bitter Orange lotion has extracts of orange, wheatgerm, fenugreek and winter cheery. |
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Eleanor was even more bitter than her husband, refusing to forgive barrow for his coldness. |
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I'd already drafted a bitter, bilious, bombastic broadside against the right-wing hacks on the Republican Court. |
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There was a collective gasp at both the four-letter word and the bitter sentiment it carried. |
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Yet even as the Germans wallowed in bitter self-pity, another defeated superpower underwent a dramatic turnaround. |
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At the most basic level, most ciders are produced using a blend of sweet, sour, and bitter apple and pear varieties. |
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The relationship of both parties turned bitter, with the two pitting again during the 2010 city elections in which Lim won against Atienza. |
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Farmers often prefer the bitter varieties because they deter pests, animals, and thieves. |
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When his efforts at conversion failed, he grew increasingly bitter toward them. |
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This was a bitter disappointment for Zwingli and it marked his decline in political influence. |
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In politics he showed himself a Whig, and engaged in a bitter quarrel with the Rev. |
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She has made a habit of rechewing and reswallowing the regurgitated food but will spit it out when the regurgitant is bitter or sour. |
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Breweries would tend to designate beers as pale ale, though customers would commonly refer to the same beers as bitter. |
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The roots are a main ingredient of a bitter liqueur from Bavaria and the Black Forest area, called Blutwurz. |
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Rory McIlroy looked downcast... his body language saying it all, head down and shoulders slumped, he is a picture of bitter disappointment. |
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How could he appease the wrath of Him who died on the cross, save by years of bitter supplication and self-punishment? |
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I knew a stunned plunge of disappointment and a bitter anger. What right had he to issue such an arbitrary ukase? |
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The reason being, is that the bitter cold kills the hemlock's adversary, the hemlock woolly adelgid, a tiny insect pest. |
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In addition, the formulation is said to include masking flavors that cover the bitter aftertaste left by the stevia ingredient. |
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Unless handled in specific ways during cooking, the sweet, creamy pulp will revert to bitter astringency. |
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Unfortunately, the interaction of proteins and polyphenols produces astringency and bitter taste. |
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Here are the basics in case you find yourself eating bitter herbs or on a quest for the Afikoman tonight. |
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High up in the Andes Mountains of South America, one of the few sources of food is a wild potato that also has bitter alkaloids. |
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Both flowers and leaves are edible, the flavour ranging between mild lettuce and more bitter salad greens. |
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Men have tasted of the apples of Sodom, and they have found bitter ashes under an inviting and luscious surface. |
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Many medicines taste bitter because they contain alkaloid compounds. Quinine, caffeine, and the antihistamines are familiar examples. |
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And once you become a bickersome couple it's a short ride to bitter and trapped. |
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By the final whistle at Murrayfield last night, the Australians were choking back the bitter pill of disappointment and defeat. |
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Cleaving the air with bloodstroke upon bloodstroke, Jarl made his bitter steel sing. |
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The bitter wind cut like a knife, freezing my fingers and numbing my circulation. |
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There were roots of some sort, also, baking like earthapples near the fire, and a basket of late berries, most of them bitter. I ate them anyway. |
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Mandalay. In the name there was a euphony which beckoned to the imagination, yet this was the bitter, withered reality. |
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He came back with a pint of Guinness for me and a half of bitter for Wendy. |
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She had never heard of matzo, never tasted the bitter herb, never waited, impatiently, for the moment when she could eat the charoset. |
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From the same lips the honied phrases fall That still are bitter from cascades of gall. |
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Officials know that if this year's budget is a bitter pill to swallow, next year's will be a bitter horse pill. |
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Now, Bildad, I am sorry to say, had the reputation of being an incorrigible old hunks, and in his sea-going days, a bitter, hard task-master. |
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Clodius was a bitter opponent of Cicero because Cicero had testified against him in a sacrilege case. |
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The unusually bitter taste of aqueous juniperin solutions is not in accord with a mixture of only sugars and tannin. |
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Prussia's humiliating treatment at Tilsit caused a deep and bitter antagonism which festered as the Napoleonic era progressed. |
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Though unpleasantly bitter, karela tops the list of diabetes-friendly foods. |
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The residue, however, is extremely acid and bitter, practically untasteable. |
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There is some overlap between the weakest styles of bitter and light mild, with the term AK being used to refer to both. |
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English Porters and stouts are generally as dark or darker than old ales, and significantly more bitter. |
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London porter differs from stout in having generally lower gravity and lighter body, closer to bitter. |
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Two groups of drinkers may mark differently the point at which a best bitter then becomes a premium bitter. |
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Hop levels will vary within each sub group, though there is a tendency for the hops in the session bitter group to be more noticeable. |
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Pockets of demand remain, particularly in the West Midlands and North West England, but has been largely ousted by bitter and lager elsewhere. |
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But even in 1776, this concept was thought to be mentionable only as the consequence of a bitter struggle. |
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The unraveling of the races left Dunraven in a bitter disagreement with all parties over fairness of the cup committee concerning claims. |
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When this agreement became public in May 1922, bitter resentment was expressed in Germany, but the treaty was still ratified by both countries. |
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The Inland Northwest has a continental climate of warm to hot summers and cold to bitter cold winters. |
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But Stella shouldn't really be drunk in pints the same way our dads used to drink bitter or mild that was effectively half as strong. |
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Soon after Walpole's resignation, a bitter family quarrel between the King and the Prince of Wales split the Royal Family. |
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Although he had twice as many men as Washington, the bitter memory of Bunker Hill made him highly reluctant to attack entrenched American forces. |
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The bitter division in public opinion provoked by the British intervention in the Middle East has already had one disastrous consequence. |
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Alcoholic drinks served in pubs include wines and English beers such as bitter, mild, stout, and brown ale. |
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If sugar turned bitter, he would miss the sweet. And if he someday turned old and mean, he would miss himself. |
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Most of the Highlanders and Marines who survived the bitter fighting were taken prisoner by the Japanese. |
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Further on, the Soviets focused on a bitter rivalry with Mao's China for leadership of the global communist movement. |
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The Basques were ravaged by the War of the Bands, bitter partisan wars between local ruling families. |
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Houdini was apparently unable to convince Doyle that his feats were simply illusions, leading to a bitter public falling out between the two. |
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He realised that his ordeal had filled his soul with the fruit of experience, however bitter it tasted at the time. |
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In the early 1980s the state was again plunged into often bitter debate over the proposed Franklin River Dam. |
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The continuing futile debate on the issue served to further increase bitter feelings. |
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These debts, as much as the taxation imposed by Westminster, were among the colonists' most bitter grievances. |
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Furthermore, he drifted to the right of the Liberal party and became a bitter critic of its policies. |
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The Disruption of 1843 was a bitter, nationwide division which split the established Church of Scotland. |
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Later in life, because of his belief that he was unjustly treated by the RAF, Dowding became increasingly bitter. |
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It was the last Scottish clan battle fought on Skye, in which the Clan MacDonald of Sleat defeated the Clan MacLeod after a bitter feud. |
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The bitter rivalry between Celtic and Rangers in Glasgow, known as the Old Firm, is known worldwide for its sectarian divide. |
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Ives can use music to editorialize, hence In Flanders Fields and its bitter antiwar noisemaking. |
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However, The Royal Bank of Scotland tabled a rival offer, and a bitter takeover battle ensued, with the Royal Bank the victor. |
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In late July 1809 the regiment took part in the Battle of Talavera, one of the bloodiest and most bitter of engagements during the war. |
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Plants with traits such as small seeds or bitter taste would have been seen as undesirable. |
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In 1645, Sir John Owen was appointed governor of the castle instead, however, leading to a bitter dispute between the two men. |
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The harsh and bitter feelings of this or that experience are slowly obliterated. |
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Calzaghe was bitter that Reid refused to face him whilst holding the WBC Championship in a unification bout and vowed to beat him. |
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As his power grew, his enemies increased in number, and bitter disputes with the high nobility became frequent. |
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They will then stay there for a matter of months until the calf has developed enough blubber to survive the bitter temperatures of the poles. |
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The seeds themselves are poisonous and bitter, but are opened and eaten by some bird species including hawfinches, greenfinches and great tits. |
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Bartholin mentions a woman whose milk was become absinthiated, and rendered as bitter as gall, by the too liberal use of wormwood. |
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After two bitter referendums, Newfoundlanders voted to join Canada in 1949 as a province. |
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Puma SE and Adidas entered into a fierce and bitter business rivalry after the split. |
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They are mainly eaten in the unripe green form, since the ripe yellow form normally becomes bitter and sour. |
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By 407, the estrangement between the eastern and western courts had become so bitter that it threatened civil war. |
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In the Late Middle Ages, the Basque Country was ravaged by the War of the Bands, bitter partisan wars between local ruling families. |
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In some cases, these policies triggered bitter conflicts and further ethnic separatism. |
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Afonso's life ended on a bitter note, with a painful and ignominious close. |
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Trade was now scattered over a number of ports among bitter warfare in the Straits. |
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What name is given to the aperitif of fortified wine flavoured with bitter herbs? |
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After a bitter election season, bipartisanship and comity are in vogue. |
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We were at the Bitter Lemon now, Furry, Versie, Charley and I, waiting for the crowd to arrive. |
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More than 50 cask ales, lagers and ciders will be on available, including Abbot Ale, Cumberland Ale, Titanic Iceberg and Sam Smith's Old Brewery Bitter. |
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Bitter Melon is known as an antipoison or antipyretic agent. |
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Bitter herbs also tone the smooth muscles in your gastrointestinal tract. |
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But the way things turned out is all the more poignant if you see the enthusiasm she brought to Bitter Rice, as well as the steamy energy of the dance sequences. |
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Bitter experience leads me to suggest covering the newly planted containers with chicken wire to prevent squirrels from digging the whole lot up again. |
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By 515 AD, Himyar became increasingly divided along religious lines and a bitter conflict between different factions paved the way for an Aksumite intervention. |
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The ingredients, generally recognized as safe by the FDA, include bitter gourd, naja jihwa, jambul, fenugreek, bengal quince, gurmar and cinnamon. |
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Yet surely he was a humorless robot of a man, spewing forth lonely and bitter critiques of all those lesser mortals with whom he could not identify. |
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However, in spite of Denmark's outside support, naval dominance and initial support from the population of the former eastern provinces, the war ended in a bitter stalemate. |
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It is thought that customers used the term bitter to differentiate these pale ales from other less noticeably hopped beers such as porter and mild. |
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By 1830 onward the expressions bitter and pale ale were synonymous. |
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All of the Irreconcilables were bitter enemies of President Wilson, and he launched a nationwide speaking tour in the summer of 1919 to refute them. |
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Cassava varieties are often categorized as either sweet or bitter, signifying the absence or presence of toxic levels of cyanogenic glucosides, respectively. |
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Once harvested, bitter cassava must be treated and prepared properly prior to human or animal consumption, while sweet cassava can be used after simply boiling. |
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Like other roots and tubers, both bitter and sweet varieties of cassava contain antinutritional factors and toxins, with the bitter varieties containing much larger amounts. |
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Taste is the most important sense in sheep, establishing forage preferences, with sweet and sour plants being preferred and bitter plants being more commonly rejected. |
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The traditional remedy is a bitter preparation made from steamed herbs. |
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The slightly bitter taste of cucumbers results from cucurbitacins. |
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The news came as a bitter blow to the newly elected Barcelona president Joan Laporta, who based much of his presidential campaign on signing Beckham. |
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Over four years, 237 named battles were fought, as were many more minor actions and skirmishes, which were often characterized by their bitter intensity and high casualties. |
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He resigned on 15 May 1915 amidst bitter arguments with the First Lord of the Admiralty, Winston Churchill, over Gallipoli, causing Churchill's resignation too. |
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In the beginning of the century bitter controversies between strict Calvinists and more permissive Protestants, known as Remonstrants, split the country. |
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A bitter easterly breeze blew with a threat of oncoming winter. |
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There was a bitter wind and she looked shrammed in her thin dress. |
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They are bitter at first but after about 1 second, they become sweet. |
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They appear to have surrendered with little resistance, unlike the Silures and the Ordovices who put up a long and bitter resistance to Roman rule. |
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It came at the end of a bitter conflict within the established Church, and had huge effects not only within the Church, but also upon Scottish civic life. |
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The immediate cause of the split lay in a bitter dispute over the venue for the replay of an Irish Cup match in 1921 involving Glentoran of Belfast and Shelbourne of Dublin. |
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Now we grow Newtown Pippins, Baldwins, Golden Russets, and Jonathans, all derived from the small, bitter, wild apples that originated in Kazakhstan. |
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He also saw his friendship with theatre critic Clement Scott turn bitter. |
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The power struggle to establish Kim Il Sung as the sole leader in North Korea took almost a decade, entailing a series of bitter factional infights. |
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The company's new Vinland Bitter has broken into the Norwegian market, with three shipments already being sent across the North Sea. |
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A COUPLE who spent PS50,000 on a neighbours' dispute after trouble getting their wheely bin through a side passage have lost a bitter four-year legal battle. |
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But please use tender young squash. The zuke someone overlooked in the garden until it was the size of a rolling pin will be too bitter for this casserole. |
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I had a nice beef sandwich washed down with a pint of bitter. |
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The crunchy Amaretti biscuits and Amaretto liqueur in the recipe add a delicious bitter almond flavour to cut through the creaminess of the pudding. |
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Drinkable, dry, but slightly bitter with acidic after-taste. |
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Beer can develop an unpleasant, bitter aftertaste over time. |
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Once the trees leave the hometown, the fruit becomes bitter and acerb. |
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The bitter wind made me wish I hadn't opted for that unlined coat. |
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The politics of Victorian Leicester were lively and very often bitter. |
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Queen Victoria was bitter at his departure as Prime Minister. |
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He also forged a bitter rivalry with Gladstone of the Liberal Party. |
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Causing intensely bitter feeling between players as well as injury. |
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Various suggestions have been put forward to explain Henry's family's bitter disputes, from their inherited family genetics to the failure of Henry and Eleanor's parenting. |
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Published in 1930, just eleven days after his death, his last work Nettles was a series of bitter, nettling but often wry attacks on the moral climate of England. |
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He had been suffering from alcohol psychosis for some time brought on by the excessive amounts of whisky he used to drown out the bitter taste of the chloral hydrate. |
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Its flavour is dominated by malt, sometimes with roasty notes derived from the use of black malt, with a subdued hop character, though there are some quite bitter examples. |
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The majority of British beers with the name India Pale Ale will be found in this group, This is the most common strength of bitter sold in British pubs. |
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There is no agreed and defined difference between an ordinary and a best bitter other than one particular brewery's best bitter will usually be stronger than its ordinary. |
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British brewers have several loose names for variations in beer strength, such as best bitter, special bitter, extra special bitter, and premium bitter. |
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This is the most common strength of bitter sold in British pubs. |
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English beer styles include bitter, mild, brown ale and old ale. |
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I find them a curiously confronting sight, dressed in thongs, boardies and Victoria Bitter singlets, and shrouded in Australian flags. |
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It produces Boddington's Bitter, and bottled and keg Bass Pale Ale for export. |
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Bitter belongs to the pale ale style and can have a great variety of strength, flavour and appearance from dark amber to a golden summer ale. |
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He played for the Falcons in their 1999 Tetley's Bitter Cup final defeat to the London Wasps. |
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The cup changed its name again after Leicesters' 1997 victory, becoming the Tetley's Bitter Cup for the 1998 season. |
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In general, the canal north of the Bitter Lakes flows north in winter and south in summer. |
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Bitter rivalries inside and between the three major parties worsened when Asquith was unable to forge the coalition into a harmonious team. |
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Bitter aftertaste has been a primary concern with commonly used high Reb A stevias, both for manufacturers and consumers. |
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Written after 1450, it contains many of the elements still associated with the legend, from the Nottingham setting to the bitter enmity between Robin and the local sheriff. |
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Bitter infighting, back-stabbing and a dressing room all pulling in different directions appears to be the order of the day at the Midlands club. |
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Giving them amnesty would be a bitter pill for the U.S. to swallow. |
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Those with the most antioxidants contained fruit with high phenolics levels, such as Yarlington Mill, Medaille D'Or and Ashton Bitter apples. |
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He was bitter about the whole thing, but he wasn't crying in his beer. |
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Bitter, his daughter-in-law, Kathy Bitter, and grandparents, Leslie and Pauline Mangel, and aunts and uncles. |
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Early in the 19th century, the rise of the modern missions movement, and the backlash against it, led to widespread and bitter controversy among the American Baptists. |
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He straightway broke into bitter lamentations, such as I had never heard from him before, for he had always asserted that such wailing was for craven and lowhearted men. |
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Seeds of carrots, parsnip, and brassicas were also discovered, but they were poor specimens and tend to come from white carrots and bitter tasting cabbages. |
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Mediterranean Tonic joins Fever-Tree Tonic Water, Naturally Light Tonic Water, Bitter Lemon, Club Soda, Ginger Ale and Ginger Beer. |
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The legalisation of free radios caused a bitter fight for airspace. |
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Although the Axis victory was swift, bitter partisan warfare subsequently broke out against the Axis occupation of Yugoslavia, which continued until the end of the war. |
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Bitter taste negatively correlated with oxalic acid and sweet taste. |
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A Bitter Herb dramatizes, with acute insight, what have again become contemporary debates around the proposed re-introduction of transrace adoption. |
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Bitter complaints were excited by the rigour with which Montfort suppressed the excesses of the Seigneurs and of contending factions in the great communes. |
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The Bitter Almond is distinguished from its relative the Sweet Almond in that its fruits are have an irregular shape and the seed is highly poisonous. |
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Plumb Bob Bitter was specially brewed and bottled for Aedis Group and will be spreading festive cheer to the firm's clients up and down the country. |
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Bitter apple used to be popular and you may still be able to get that too. |
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Bitter complaints were excited by de Montfort's rigour in suppressing the excesses of both the seigneurs of the nobility and the contending factions in the great communes. |
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Bitter Seville oranges grow on trees lining the city streets. |
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As well, she sang in Gerald Barry's The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant for Irish Radio, and in the title role of L'enfant et les sortileges, in Maestricht, Holland. |
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Thus there was Mild Ale but also Mild Porter and even Mild Bitter Beer. |
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