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"titbit" Definitions
  1. a small special piece of food synonym morsel
  2. a small but interesting piece of news synonym snippet

10 Sentences With "titbit"

How to use titbit in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "titbit" and check conjugation/comparative form for "titbit". Mastering all the usages of "titbit" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The most important titbit so far has been the unveiling of this year's target for economic growth.
And there are too many potential influences on growth for economists to know whether a seemingly strong relationship between variables is real or would disappear if they factored in some other relevant titbit, such as the wages of Canadian lumberjacks.
The doors are then thrown open, and the lucky clodpole receives the titbit as his recompense.
Even so, Williams considered that the saga seems to imply that the family had dynastic connections with important individuals of the Suðreyjar, including 'Óláfr 'Titbit', King of Mann and the Isles.
A sainete (farce or titbit) was a popular Spanish comic opera piece, a one-act dramatic vignette, with music. It was often placed at the end of entertainments, or between other types of performance. It was vernacular in style, and used scenes of low life. Active from the 18th to 20th centuries, it superseded the entremés.
Strabane has an Irish-medium nursery, Naíscoil an tSratha Báin, which was founded in 1994, and a Gaelscoil (primary school). A common greeting in Strabane and the wider North West is "What's the bars?" This means "What's the news?" or "What's the latest gossip?" This may derive from Irish, from the phrase "barr nuachta," meaning "titbit," referring to a tasty piece of news.
In 2004 Davide left Naples for Barcelona. In the following years he released Ep's for labels such as, Ovum, Sci+Tec, Morris Audio, Resopal Schallware, Supernature, CMYK, Adagio, Viva, Nervous, Saved, Shake, Rillis. These releases led to appearances at venues such as Circoloco, where he has been a resident since 2007, Coachella, Sónar, Womb, Berghain and many more. He also created several labels, releasing his own music, but also from other artists: Sketch, Minisketch, Vir, 500, Titbit and Hideout. His side project, Better Lost Than Stupid sees Davide collaborate with fellow revered DJ’s: Martin Buttrich and Matthias Tanzmann.
Duff Cooper's victory for the Conservatives in St. George's Westminster by-election in March 1931 marked the end of the movement as an electoral force. On 17 March 1931, during the St. George's Westminster by-election, Stanley Baldwin described the media barons who owned British newspapers as having "Power without responsibility – the prerogative of the harlot throughout the ages." In the 1930s, while personally attempting to dissuade King Edward VIII from continuing his affair with American divorcee, Wallis Simpson, Beaverbrook's newspapers published every titbit of the affair, especially allegations about pro-Nazi sympathies. Beaverbrook supported the Munich Agreement and hoped the newly named Duke of Windsor would seek a peace deal with Germany.
Alex Fletcher of Digital Spy Chart Blog gave the song a positive review stating: > With a dash of Terence Trent D'Arby, a fair dollop of Justin Timberlake and > a sprinkling of Prince, David Jordan looks to have stumbled upon a recipe > for chart success. His first release 'Place In My Heart' got critics' > tongues wagging, while his last single 'Sun Goes Down' had plenty of fans > splashing their pocket money, bagging the Barnet-born warbler a number four > chart spot. With his debut album Set The Mood wriggling up the top 40, it's > perfect timing for release number three. His latest titbit, 'Move On', > follows a similar formula to his last two releases, focusing on Jordan's > ability to switch between piercing falsetto and husky warbling at the drop > of a beat.
In a 1928 Schleswig-Holstein dictionary, the following description is given: "The Heißwecken are produced by bakers, usually to a secret recipe, as round cakes about 10-15 centimetres in diameter. The main ingredients are wheat flour, butter and sugar; various spices (caneel ["cinnamon"], cardamom, raisins) are then added to this mixture (...) Coated with butter or filled with sugar, caneel and butter and soaked in milk or egg milk, they were often eaten at every meal of the day during the first half of the 'week of fasting'." There is a very similar definition in 1781 in a Low German dictionary, the Plattdeutsche Wörterbuch, from Western Pomerania, which calls them Heetweggen and says that they are "a Fastnacht [carnival] roll, prepared with spice, butter and eggs in hot milk as a titbit ("Löffelspeise")". The 1800 Holsteinische Idiotikon also records that servants in cities like Hamburg were sent to the baker in the morning in those days with a basket and cushions to keep the fresh rolls warm.

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