When it is REALLY cold
The error in the sentence "it is bitter cold today" is a missing comma after "bitter." The correct phrasing should be "it is bitterly cold today," using the adverb "bitterly" to modify the adjective "cold." Alternatively, a comma could be added for a stylistic pause, making it "it is bitter, cold today," but the adverbial form is the more standard correction.
They both are cold and bitter.
a place where there is nothing but ice
United States president John F. Kennedy described the cold war as "a hard and bitter". He made this statement during his Inaugural address.
Cold, Brutal, Bitter, Violent, Dangerous
The Taiga has very bitter cold wind
Because he/she is uncomfortable outside in the cold. Look into doggy clothes or shoes.
I'm doing quite fine, besides the bitter cold. Thanks.
Welcome... mother... baby... bitter. hope that helps!
If you imagine taking that bitter taste on your tongue and turning it into an emotion, you've got another meaning of bitter: a resentful, angry feeling. And if you turn that bitter flavor into a physical feeling, you've got an adjective that describes a sharp, unpleasant sensation, like a cold, bitter wind.
The vegetation in the area was very scarce during the cold, bitter winter.
It is the tundra climate zone