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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
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  • 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.
  • Our guide gave us some interesting titbits about the history of the castle.
  • 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
  • We overfeed at meal times and tend to give titbits for our furry friends.
  • He gave me an amuse-gueule, a mini gazpacho, while I was in the kitchen, and a little orange jelly which was delicious, but those were Hunca Munca titbits, not serious nourishment.
  • The doors are then thrown open, and the lucky clodpole receives the titbit as his recompense.
  • Emma reads tabloids everyday in order to get some juicy titbit.
  • Environmental health officers hope the cotes will keep pigeons off the streets and discourage them from feeding on waste food and titbits offered by tourists.
  • A century later, in the 1890s, it became an English word referring to a titbit of this kind.
  • For some reason they put me in mind of ravenous guests back at the resort, cruising the stacked buffet counters for the tastiest titbits at lunchtime.
  • The sharks rushed for the splash, and in their haste ran into one another, and splashed with their tails till the water was all foam and they could see nothing, each thinking some other was swallowing the titbit. THE WATER BABY
  • Our guide gave us some interesting titbits about the history of the castle.
  • Last week's news included the titbit that a DVD of King Lear has become a surprise hit at Poundland, the new destination shop for recession-hit middle classes. Harry Potter and the Deadly Dullards | Victoria Coren
  • Her mouth was working, as if she was masticating some tasty titbit.
  • Olga offered to show me the ropes because she thought I was a "titbit" – as young girls who had not been long in the business were called – and she did not like to think of another girl being so lonely and isolated as she had been during her first weeks at the "Ice Palace," as she called the house. Madeleine: An Autobiography
  • There are chocolates galore and delicious savoury titbits and the packaging alone looks good enough to eat.
  • It is intended to appear factual, while slipping inflammatory titbits under the radar of whoever is reading it.
  • Dick Reese's violin solo is to be one of our titbits and Kit Reese is in every tableau and the three small girls have the cutest flag-drill. Rilla of Ingleside
  • Toy breeds tend to lose their teeth at an early age (sometimes as early as three years) but the avoidance of commercial treats and titbits will preserve them for as long as is possible.
  • The public was very good to us, they brought us in food and titbits and so on.
  • Our Charlie proved the most sought-after subject on the web after scurrilous allegations prompted a fact-starved UK public to scour the Net for tasty titbits.
  • Toy breeds tend to lose their teeth at an early age (sometimes as early as three years) but the avoidance of commercial treats and titbits will preserve them for as long as is possible.
  • I tend to remember things better if I have a little titbit of interesting information to go with it.
  • Hot hors d’œuvres could be miniature savoury pastries or tiny fritters or other similar titbits; but these do not belong to the mainstream hors d’œuvres tradition.
  • Environmental health officers hope the cotes will keep pigeons off the streets and discourage them from feeding on waste food and titbits offered by tourists.
  • The titbits his own hunting skill provided were insignificant when set against his voracious appetite, and it was the duty of his parents to make up the difference.
  • This pie would be one containing especially fine titbits such as cockscombs and sweetbreads.
  • After all, in her 1993 autobiography she disclosed one or two juicier titbits contained in the files, which she was allowed to see soon after the Wall came down.
  • But no titbits of food - well, maybe just a couple of slithers of sliced chicken.
  • The public was very good to us, they brought us in food and titbits and so on.
  • Mind you, some of the old buffers at the New Club have got wind of this and say they have slipped Fraser a few new titbits about Jack's role in the Holyrood business.
  • We all know that sort of transaction: the squabbling, and gobbling, and popping of champagne; the smell of musk and lobster-salad; the dowagers chumping away at plates of raised pie; the young lassies nibbling at little titbits, which the dexterous young gentlemen procure. Mrs. Perkins's Ball
  • I will fabricate an award out of tin foil and plaster in recognition of that unsolicited macro-economic titbit, which is quite true enough. Priestly Castes and Political Exclusion
  • The word "titbit," in English since the early 17th century, became "tidbit" when it crossed the Atlantic. Letters
  • He gave me an amuse-gueule, a mini gazpacho, while I was in the kitchen, and a little orange jelly which was delicious, but those were Hunca Munca titbits, not serious nourishment.
  • But no titbits of food - well, maybe just a couple of slithers of sliced chicken.
  • Our Charlie proved the most sought-after subject on the web after scurrilous allegations prompted a fact-starved UK public to scour the Net for tasty titbits.
  • Her mouth was working, as if she was masticating some tasty titbit.
  • 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.
  • Can I welcome whoever it is in this room from the Jewish Chronicle who is waiting for some choice little titbit to make into a huge scandal to try to get me sacked from my party," she said. Hugh Muir's Diary
  • I tend to remember things better if I have a little titbit of interesting information to go with it.
  • Among the unlikely Winona titbits treasured by her fans are the facts that she suffers from both insomnia and aquaphobia, that she really has blond hair, that her godfather was drugs evangelist Timothy Leary, that her brother Uri was named after the Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, that her father knew Allen Ginsberg and that Johnny Depp had to have his tattoo altered from "Winona Forever" to "Wino Forever" when they split up. Film | guardian.co.uk
  • For some reason they put me in mind of ravenous guests back at the resort, cruising the stacked buffet counters for the tastiest titbits at lunchtime.
  • Though nothing as yet had touched his flesh, he was a titbit trapped in stiffest aspic.
  • Throughout Lady Rebecca regaled members with interesting titbits and explanations of why the Elizabethans wore shifts, fur trimming, cuffs and ruffs, etc.
  • But no titbits of food - well, maybe just a couple of slithers of sliced chicken.
  • After all, in her 1993 autobiography she disclosed one or two juicier titbits contained in the files, which she was allowed to see soon after the Wall came down.
  • Her pet, to be slipped titbits and fondled when no one was looking.
  • A keeper threw in huge slabs of raw meat, and the beasts tore them apart in front of us, while we were fed interesting titbits of information by another keeper.
  • Our guide gave us some interesting titbits about the history of the castle.
  • Her mouth was working, as if she was masticating some tasty titbit.
  • The titbit of a child, the morsel of sweetness, has spoken, and has exposed the one among us who has saved him. The Water Baby
  • The fruit is to be canned in chunks, slices, titbits and juice.
  • The fruit is to be canned in chunks, slices, titbits and juice.

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