titbit

[ UK /tˈɪtbɪt/ ]
NOUN
  1. a small tasty bit of food
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How To Use titbit In A Sentence

  • Such football titbits always float to the surface on third-round day which remains the best, most hectic, interesting and fun day of the season - and this one was even more frenetic than usual.
  • Such football titbits always float to the surface on third-round day which remains the best, most hectic, interesting and fun day of the season - and this one was even more frenetic than usual.
  • There are chocolates galore and delicious savoury titbits and the packaging alone looks good enough to eat.
  • I was tempted by one of the specials, braised pigeon, but the thought of all those plump pigeons in York's Parliament Street guzzling titbits of junk food from tourists put me off.
  • Franz Lehár's operetta is the perfect titbit for a financial crisis, as it concerns the fiscal anxieties of a small European state whose entire GDP has ended up in a flighty young widow's jewellery drawer. The Merry Widow – review
  • The Daily Mirror has a Wicked Whispers section, where tantalising titbits of news are disseminated in teasers.
  • The anchor tried to pep up the proceedings with titbits and comments on every participant.
  • The fruit is to be canned in chunks, slices, titbits and juice.
  • I was tempted by one of the specials, braised pigeon, but the thought of all those plump pigeons in York's Parliament Street guzzling titbits of junk food from tourists put me off.
  • Her mouth was working, as if she was masticating some tasty titbit.
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