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How To Use Tittle In A Sentence

  • During my playing career, what passed as scandals were more along the lines of tabloid tittle-tattle than criminal investigations.
  • I like the quote from the intelligence tittle-tattler: In this business nothing is unlikely. Rock steady
  • This kitchen table tittle-tattle had no public interest justification.
  • And she may gain some idea what the many targets of News of the World tittle-tattle and tell all stories may have felt. Dan Ehrlich: Jail/Hollywood Her Next Career Moves?
  • Be it ours to spread the mantle of a Christian charity as far as possible over the actors in the dark scene, while we abate not one jot or tittle of the deep and irradicable hatred which we cherish toward the abominable system. The Martyrs, and the Fugitive; or a Narrative of the Captivity, Sufferings, and Death of an African Family, and the Slavery and Escape of Their Son
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  • Gossip can be the malicious spreading of misinformation, but unsubstantiated tittle-tattle is sometimes all we have to go on. Readers recommend: songs about gossip
  • The couple happily ushered me in, poured me an enormous whisky and denied every jot and tittle of the rumour.
  • OK, the purple shadow, peach tip gloss, bronze foundation and 50 coats of mascara are a tittle glam, but I don't look right.
  • The boy soon recovered his senses, and told me, readily and consistently, the following tale, which I again heard him repeat before the magistrate, in a different sequence, but without a tittle of variation.
  • The tittle is The Foodie Handbook: The (almost) Definitive Guide to Gastronomy. Seattle Bon Vivant:
  • He would become known to thousands of regular viewers as an extremely witty man with a wicked, often cutting sense of humour that deconstructed the celebrity tittle-tattle the programme was forced to report on.
  • It's a strange combination of gossip and in-house tittle-tattle.
  • How can we as a faith community keep credibility among the youth of today if we cling to every jot and tittle of an outmoded social code while thousands die of leprosy and hunger?
  • Long before the term alley-oop became synonymous with dunking a basketball, San Francisco wide receiver R. C. Owens invented the play on Kezar's turf, using his leaping ability to snag lobs in the end zone from Tittle. NYT > Home Page
  • Think, for example, of Whitman's insistence on celebrating every jot and tittle of the created world.
  • Weaving through all this tittle-tattle is a narrative.
  • The man is to music bloggers what pissed Whitehall tittle-tattle is to Westminster diarists. Kanye West's Runaway: Purple Rain or bird brains?
  • If you challenge it or any of the matters I am trying to say in it, then you have done nothing but verify every jot and tittle of it, and there is little hope.
  • The views of a union leader about a major strike hardly counts as tittle-tattle.
  • Nor are the Democrats saying that every jot and tittle of all its complex tables of inflows and outflows are sacrosanct today.
  • They (to switch to the gender-free plural) are also wont to niggle and squiggle over every jot and tittle.
  • Laboring over every jot and tittle - the life work of our paper-pushing peace processors - is quite mad.
  • You just get a tittle better, then you stay consistent with that.
  • Being in the big leagues and to win a batting tittle is amazing. USATODAY.com
  • Every tittle and apex shall give them occasion for fruitless conjectures, as vain, for the most part, as those of the cabalistical Pneumatologia
  • I cannot see a tittle of evidence so far in this case that the United States as a government has failed in any way in that respect.
  • You sway to a pulse in the very fabric of being, a pulse that awakens a celestial symphony of tones, as every jot and tittle sings its song with mathemagical purity - each song utterly selfish, their harmonic blending utterly selfless.
  • I don't agree with every jot and tittle of his response, but I don't differ from it enough to write a separate post.
  • The truth is, it doesn't matter, not a jot, not a tittle.
  • They always want to cloud the issue with facts and figures, spoiling what should be a hot and heavy session of tittle-tattle with words like ‘truth’ and ‘proof’.
  • Gibson seems to have been ubiquitous in the tittle-tattle press recently, and absolutely none of it is positive. Will Hangover 2 cameo give Mel Gibson more headaches?
  • And just an FYI, I'm from Latin America and the films tittle is being translated to BATMAN: THE DARK KNIGHT. It's All in a Name - Batman: The Dark Knight « FirstShowing.net
  • His play slipped a tittle as the season wore on.
  • Alternative view: the phrase 'not one jot or tittle' has passed into everyday English and is generally understood. 'iota' and 'prime-mark' are terms with which few people are familiar. Conservapedia - Recent changes [en]
  • He is flicking idly through the tabloid tittle-tattle, recounting a story of marital strife, laughing at the expense of others, and yet again avoiding work.
  • They (to switch to the gender-free plural) are also wont to niggle and squiggle over every jot and tittle.
  • All this while, here is not one tittle of the church and its testimony; and if that be the only means whereby men can be assured of the divineness of the word, how comes Christ to overlook it? The Sermons of John Owen
  • The tittle-tattle brigade is laughing all the way to the latest social do.
  • We were right in our guesses here to a tittle, and we steered directly through a large outlet, which they call a strait, though it be fifteen miles broad, and to an island they call Dammer, and from thence N.N.E. to The Life, Adventures & Piracies of the Famous Captain Singleton
  • Read any blogs - even those of the ghastly BBC - and there is not one jot nor one tittle of enthusiasm for a Cameron-led Tory party outside the Notting Hill chatterati, oh, and Matthew d'Ancona. Tony Blair: The Next Labour Prime Minister?
  • I reckon the gossip surrounding her breasts is just that - idle tittle-tattle.
  • It seemed an odd sort of voyeurism, titillation without a tittle of anything much going on, boredom elevated to a modern art form.
  • What's more, the assumption that foreign ships picking people up and letting them off in the US should have to obey every jot and tittle of US law is an extreme imperialist idea.
  • We are shown into a miserable garret, and introduced to a vulgar, illiterate, cockneyfied, dirty, dandified linendraper's shopman, in the person of _Tittlebat Titmouse_. Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 1, November 27, 1841
  • They are tittle-tattle, nothing remotely important.
  • Those aspects work ‘well enough for survival’, but not necessarily one whit, jot or tittle better.
  • If you then could have inquired asking the Saviour how comprehensive is this inspiration, He would answer you that, ‘not a jot or a tittle of the law shall pass away until all be fulfilled.’
  • There was some tittle-tattle a few weeks back that eBay was interested in buying the company.
  • In an age of lurid, kiss-and-tell celebrity tittle-tattle, the gentle contours of a smoothly flowing career and the discreet details of a happy, lasting marriage are hardly the material of a bestseller.
  • I have to say the not inclding BATMAN in the tittle is an awesome move. It's All in a Name - Batman: The Dark Knight « FirstShowing.net
  • Tory loyalists pushed out in front of the TV cameras have dismissed this as "tittle-tattle". David Cameron will plough on with the health plan at his peril | Andrew Rawnsley
  • Every jot and tittle of civilized dining etiquette is but an act of civil religious piety.
  • Did you know the dot over the letter i is called a tittle? Undefined
  • Not so if it's just so much tittle-tattle about essentially private affairs. News of the World vs. WikiLeaks
  • Whatever one's views, it's great to rediscover the ability to animate politics through a discussion of ideas rather than personality or passing tittle-tattle.
  • Like so much of what's been reported about Lorna Moon, it was largely codswallop, the tittle-tattle of small town gossips.
  • Thanks for your company on this marathon day of tittle-tattle. Transfer window deadline day 2012 – as it happened
  • The truth is, it doesn't matter, not a jot, not a tittle.
  • What these documents add is gossip and tittle-tattle between the negotiators. Letters: Palestine leak and the peace process
  • It is a fascinating read - serious observations on the latest political developments and possible ways of developing theoretical ideas, alongside tittle-tattle, gossip, complaints about the weather and even laundry lists.
  • Not one pickopeck of muscow — money to bag a tittlebits of beebread! Finnegans Wake
  • Those that love to boast of their business and make a noise about it, and that waste their time in tittle-tattle, in telling and hearing new things, like the Athenians, and, under pretence of improving themselves by conversation, neglect the work of their place and day, they waste what they have, and the course they take tends to penury, and will end in it. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume III (Job to Song of Solomon)
  • I deplored the way that, when the two of us were alone together, he would listen to tittle-tattle for hours on end when he must have known full well that not only was it disloyal to the victims but that both of us had more important things to do.
  • Then again, maybe none of this matters and if we have to fill our lives with something, it may as well be acrimonious tittle-tattle about the famous, the sort of famous and those desperately seeking attention.
  • My interest in talking about Keira, however, is not to add to the stockpile of tabloid tittle-tattle.
  • Miss Kitt should never have been subjected to the abuse of their powers by the F.B.I. and the C.I.A., who, under the administration of President Lyndon B. Johnson, wasted much public money by trying to gather into the relevant files grossly stupid tittle-tattle, in a sinister, surprisingly effective, but fortunately short-lived effort to destroy her career; long enough, however, to do Miss Kitt much damage. Archive 2009-01-01
  • Most political diaries are written by politicians themselves but this one records the daily political tittle-tattle told to a wife over the dinner table and is therefore more revealing.
  • Despite this he added: ‘What's important to me is not who does a particular job but that we get the message across and I'm not going to get involved in tittle-tattle and gossip about who does what.’
  • We have not directed the plan or treatment or scope of any essay; and my own editorial supervision has consisted merely in making detailed suggestions on smaller points, in exhorting contributors to be punctual and diligent, and generally revising what the New Testament calls jots and tittles. Cambridge Essays on Education
  • And no vague talk about the "evasiveness" and "over-brimmingness" of life can alter one jot or tittle of its eternal outlines. The Complex Vision
  • In a city of few wallflowers, she has the most enticing dance card of all and - like any celluloid high-school heroine - has overcome personal tragedy, tittle-tattle and bad boyfriends in order to get there.
  • These kind of stories come from tittle-tattle in pubs, or from something as simple as the way a player hangs his head when he walks off the pitch.
  • In lieu of direct experience, social tittle-tattle allows people to learn about others across a very wide group, the team say. Pssst ...The human brain is wired for gossip
  • In an age of lurid, kiss-and-tell celebrity tittle-tattle, the gentle contours of a smoothly flowing career and the discreet details of a happy, lasting marriage are hardly the material of a bestseller.
  • To ensure he still had a roof over his head, he would have needed to have a sound idea of how his lord felt about others, and to enable him to avoid any clangers, he would have been privy to much gossip and tittle-tattle.

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