different between sweetly vs bitterly

sweetly

English

Etymology

From Middle English swetly, swetely, sweteliche, from Old English sw?tl??e (sweetly; pleasantly), equivalent to sweet +? -ly. Cognate with Old High German swuozl?hho (sweetly), Icelandic sætlega (sweetly; with gratitude), German süßlich (sweetish; sugary), Dutch zoetelijk (sentimental).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?swi?tli/
  • Hyphenation: sweet?ly

Adverb

sweetly (comparative sweetlier or more sweetly, superlative sweetliest or most sweetly)

  1. In a sweet or pleasant manner.

Translations

Anagrams

  • Westley

sweetly From the web:

  • sweetly meaning
  • sweetly what part of speech
  • what does swiftly mean
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bitterly

English

Etymology

From Middle English bitterli, biterli, biterliche, from Old English biterl??e, bitterl??e (bitterly), equivalent to bitter +? -ly. Cognate with German Low German bitterlik (bitterly), German bitterlich (bitterly), Swedish bitterligen (bitterly).

Pronunciation

  • (General American) IPA(key): /?b?t??li/
  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?b?t?li/
  • Hyphenation: bit?ter?ly

Adverb

bitterly (comparative more bitterly, superlative most bitterly)

  1. In a bitter manner.

Usage notes

Some adjectives commonly collocating with profusely: cold, disappointed, dividing, frustrated

Translations

bitterly From the web:

  • bitterly meaning
  • bitterly cold meaning
  • bitterly what does it mean
  • what does bitterly cold mean
  • what was bitterly ironic about the comments
  • what is bitterly cold
  • what does bitterly
  • what does bitterly opposed mean
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