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41 Sentences With "titbits"

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

Dr Toner has overcome that, though, by decorating it with molecular titbits called acetyl groups.
They scheme like politicians, feeding titbits to friendly journalists and snubbing ones who write unhelpful truths.
The Chinese may yet include more juicy titbits for American businesses as part of the mini-deal.
Washington is packed full of lobbying shops and industry groups that concentrate on stuffing legislation with titbits or creating special privileges.
Its staff doggedly pursue sources in Xinjiang, sometimes making hundreds of calls daily, to glean titbits of information about the regime's treatment of Uighurs.
It's an ode, a thank-you note, and a guide to Manhattan, and it includes all the cherishable titbits that only someone you love would tell you.
Mrs May, who had previously kept silent about her plans, offered the mostly Eurosceptic party faithful two juicy titbits which were interpreted as leaning towards a harder Brexit.
"Ourselves and the Portuguese are doing a critical piece of work and we don't want to spoil it by putting titbits of information out publicly," Rowley said, according to the PA.
Mr Renzi's chances of victory would be enhanced by either some good economic news or the budgetary leeway to offer a few juicy titbits to voters in his government's 2017 budget.
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's seaside towns are at war with their seagulls, urging visitors not to feed the birds in an effort to stop them snatching titbits like potato chips from tourists' hands.
Such are some of the titbits revealed in "The State of the World's Plants 2016", the first of what it is hoped will be an annual series, put out by the Royal Botanic Gardens.
Their reporters are mainly outside the cosy system of "press clubs" in which groups of reporters accredited to particular ministries are fed titbits by politicians and senior bureaucrats, on the (usually unspoken) assumption that they will not spill the real beans.
The magazine name survived as a glossy adult monthly, Titbits International.
At the beginning of 1973 Tit-Bits lost the hyphen from its masthead. In 1979 Reveille (a weekly tabloid with a virtually identical demographic) was merged into Titbits, and the magazine was briefly rebranded as Titbits incorporating Reveille. This however was dropped in July 1981.
On 18 July 1984, under its last editor Paul Hopkins, Titbits was selling only 170,000 copies and was taken over by Associated Newspapers' Weekend. At the time, the Financial Times described Titbits as "the 103-year-old progenitor of Britain's popular press". Weekend itself closed in 1989.
Balogun for UNIMED 2nd Distinguished Lecture. UNIMED Titbits, 2(5), p1. Retrieved October 6, 2017The Hope Newspaper (2017). UNIMED holds 2nd distinguished lecture today.
The first dish was a pickled starter to stimulate the appetite,Ber. vi. 7 followed by the main meal, which ended with a dessert, called in Greek θάργημα. Afiḳomen is used in the same sense. Titbits (parperet) were eaten before and after the meal (Ber. vi. 6).
Although Batu Ferringhi does not have a shopping centre, the suburb is notable for its night market. Souvenirs, DVDs, artworks, jerseys, and other apparels and accessories can be found at bargain prices within the night market, which is also lined with various food stalls that sell Penang's famed street cuisine and titbits.
Back in 1936, Popular focused on the retailing of Chinese books and stationery. It has now expanded its product offerings to include English books, Malay books, textbooks and assessment books, Gadgets & IT products, household appliances, titbits, stationery, multimedia products and many more. It currently has stores in Singapore, Malaysia and Hong Kong.
Xclusive Magazine was started in March 2006. It is published by Peter Anny- Nzekwue in the first week of every month. It celebrates African people and affirms Ireland's multicultural life. It captures the world of entertainment and engages the readership with regular coverage, in pictures and titbits, of social, professional, fashion, religious, musical events and general lifestyle.
'Gambling is Unfair to Punters Says Stanley Baker' Titbits April 1976 pp. 12–13. Retrieved 26 May 2012 On 27 May 1976, it was announced that he had been awarded a knighthood in the 1976 Prime Minister's Resignation Honours, although he did not live to be invested in person at Buckingham Palace.Stanley Baker profile, BBC. Retrieved 8 April 2014.
Since the 1850s, Western cuisine was only found in Hong Kong from full-service restaurants. They were then a privilege limited for the upper class, and financially out of reach for most working class locals. In the 1920s, dining in a Western restaurant could cost up to $10, while a working local earned $15 to $50 per month..(December 2018). Titbits Through Time.
He gradually grows more suspicious about the way she employs her time and asks a private investigator to follow her. The embarrassed detective duly reports that his wife sees a writer called Victor Pégala, at his home in Neuilly-sur-Seine, several times a week. Hélène appears in bed with Pégala, exchanging titbits about their respective lives. The writer is divorced with two children.
Currently, he is a broadcaster for Newstalk ZB in Dunedin hosting local sports shows and producing 'The Country', which airs between midday and 1pm on Newstalk ZB and Radio Sport. He is also one of the domestic Sky Sport commentator for domestic cricket and international home matches, often giving titbits and trivia on cricket terms and hosting Dilmah tea parties during the tea breaks in Test matches.
She was present at the first meeting of the National Council of Women in 1896 and was still a vice president of the Women's Institute at the time of her death. She was an active member of the St Albans Methodist Church and president of the church's Ladies' Guild. In 1885, Smith became the editor of the magazine New Zealand Titbits. She wrote under the pen name "Vesta".
As a result of his high- fat, high-calorie diet of delicacies such as chicken livers, kidneys, rabbit, and steak, the frequent titbits from admirers, and lack of exercise, Tiddles became very fat.Sarah Hartwell, Overweight and Obese Cats, MessyBeast.com cat resource archive, updated 2011, retrieved 24 September 2012 (with picture).Amanda O'Neill, Cat Biz: A Compendium of Amazing Facts and Anecdotes from the Cat World, Dorking: Interpet, 2006; Hauppauge, New York: Barron's, 2007, , p. 88.
Beginning with Creation and ending in 1236, the Chronicon aspired to give comprehensive coverage to two topics: the world and the Spains. Lucas' principal sources are Isidore, John of Biclar, Hydatius, Orosius, the Chronicle of Alfonso III, the Crónica Silense, and Sampiro. Lucas does contain a few historical titbits which are found nowhere else, but he is not generally regarded as reliable in this regard. In 1239 he was made bishop of Tuy, and there he died ten years thence.
Tiddles, also known as the Paddington Station cat, (1970-1983) was a tabby- and-white cat who spent most of his life in the ladies' room at Paddington Station, in London. Constantly fed choice meats, including titbits from his admirers, he became famously fat. On a cold morning in 1970, Tiddles was adopted as a six-week-old stray kitten by June Watson, an attendant in the ladies' room at Paddington Station.Sam Stall, 100 Cats who Changed Civilization: History's Most Influential Felines, Philadelphia: Quirk, 2007, , pp.
You must not expect a variety of dishes from a Welsh kitchen, and there are no highly- seasoned titbits to whet your appetite." The medieval Welsh used thyme, savory, and mint in the kitchen, but in general herbs were much more likely to be used for medicinal purposes than culinary ones. St. David's Day", satirical image showing Welsh dependence on leeks as food, 1790 Towards the end of the 18th century, Welsh land owners divided up the land to allow for tenant-based farming. Each small holding would include vegetable crops, as well as a cow, pigs and a few chickens.
Hamdard Naunehal () is a kids Urdu language monthly magazine first published by Hakim Said of Hamdard Laboratories in 1953. This magazine is very popular among children due to its emphasis on proper Urdu through the section نونہال لغت, titbits, moral & mystery stories, cartoons and informative snippets. The current editor for the magazine is Masood Ahmad Barkati while the patron is Sadia Rashid (daughter of late Hakim Saeed Shaheed -- a philanthropist and founder of Hamdard Industries). The current team took over after Hakim Saeed was murdered in 1998 in Karachi, Pakistan and the magazine keeps his memory alive by publishing articles from his times.
The British Army in France: Troops reading copies of the Army newspaper 'Blighty' outside their dugout, December 1939. Parade was a British magazine for men. It was originally known as Blighty between 1916 and 1920 and was intended as a humorous magazine for servicemen,Union Jack, A Scrapbook, British Forces' Newspapers 1939-45 HMSO & Imperial War Museum, 1993 () competing against magazines such as Titbits and Reveille. The magazine was relaunched in 1939, at the outbreak of the Second World War and continued afterwards until 1958, when it was renamed Blighty Parade while being turned into a pin-up magazine.
One scheme suggested electric power, while another proposed a line from South Molton. None of these schemes offered sufficient prospects to encourage investment, and few got further than initial plans. Due to the difficult terrain, one scheme suggested a narrow gauge, already in use by the and elsewhere, to ease construction. This scheme was supported by Sir George Newnes, publisher of Titbits and The Strand Magazine who became chairman of the company. The Lynton & Barnstaple Railway Bill was passed on 27 June 1895, and the line opened on 11 May 1898 with public service commencing on 16 May, connecting with trains from Waterloo on the Ilfracombe Branch Line at Barnstaple Town.
Beaverbrook "regarded the nightly diary page in the Evening Standard as his own personal fiefdom … an armoury from which he could seize a weapon at will; bludgeon, cudgel and rapier lay at his disposal as he sought to fight his way to ever greater heights of power and influence in between-the-wars Britain."Wilkes, Roger. Scandal: A Scurrilous History of Gossip, Atlantic, 2002, p. 160 The Diary provided a mischievous platform for political gossip and upper crust scandal, regaling readers with titbits on the private lives of London's high society: their excesses, their pets and their dinner-parties – but never their love affairs.
This Bruce Barrymore Halpenny bibliography is a list of books by the author and military historian Bruce Barrymore Halpenny. The author wrote for many magazines in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s – some under his own name and some under pseudonyms.Ghosts of War – by Ken Livemore - Titbits – Summer Special 1984, pages 42 - 43 At one time he was writing articles for up to 14 military journals around the world when he was approached by the publishers Patrick Stephens to do the airfield books due to his vast knowledge and authority.Author wants to preserve airfield – Yorkshire Press – Saturday, March 6, 1982 Books are in order by date.
Virginia Woolf submitted her first article to the paper in 1890, at the age of eight, but it was turned down.Amy Licence, Living in Squares, Loving in Triangles: The Lives and Loves of Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Groupg (Amberley Publishing, 2015), p. 20 The first humorous article by P. G. Wodehouse, "Men Who Missed Their Own Weddings", appeared in Tit-Bits in November 1900.From the chronology maintained by the Russian Wodehouse Society During the First World War Ivor Novello won a Titbits competition to write a song soldiers could sing at the front: he penned Keep the Home Fires Burning. Pin-ups appeared on the magazine's covers from 1939 and by 1955 circulation peaked at 1,150,000.
Noble stayed with Billy Cooper's studio and contributed spot illustrations to national magazines, such as Titbits, Wide World, Woman, Woman's Own, and John Bull as well as the regional newspaper Birmingham Weekly Post. In 1958 he started a long run of regular work in comics, with the strip Lone Ranger and Tonto (Express Weekly) followed by Range Rider for TV Comic. In 1965 he started work on TV Century 21, illustrating Fireball XL5 in colour and, later, Zero-X and Captain Scarlet. He also contributed Star Trek to the later incarnation of TV21 but the imminent demise of this comic led him to jump ship and follow Alan Fennell (his editor at TV Comic and TV21) in illustrating Timeslip in Look-In.
The TV critic for The Times called it a "tedious affair": > The males had got lost somewhere between John Osborne's Angry Young Men and > some future sequel to Last Tango in Paris... We had wife swappings, a > casino, a lavatory, an Irish hideaway, Rolls Royces and other environmental > titbits... Influenced no doubt by the presence of a film star in the cast > the camera lingered self consciously on profiles when it was not lingering > self consciously even more on the furniture. George Lazenby, the star in > question, brought to the part of the magnate a lazy, self conscious > insolence that suited the odious fellow well. The rest had little to do > except let the camera wander over their faces.Leonard Buckley.
In All Things Considered by G. K. Chesterton, the author contrasts Tit-Bits with the Times, saying: "Let any honest reader... ask himself whether he would really rather be asked in the next two hours to write the front page of The Times, which is full of long leading articles, or the front page of Tit-Bits, which is full of short jokes." Reference to the magazine is also made in James Joyce's Ulysses,"In the tabledrawer he found an old number of Titbits." Calypso episode of Ulysses by James Joyce. George Orwell's Animal Farm, C. P. Snow's The Affair,pg 210 in Volume 2 of the three-volume edition of Strangers and Brothers James Hilton's Lost Horizon, Virginia Woolf's Moments of Being, H. G. Wells' The First Men in the Moon and A. J. Cronin's The Stars Look Down.
For example, the playwright John Osborne did not acknowledge an estranged daughter in his entry; Carole Jordan does not mention any marriage in her article, although her ex-husband, Richard Peckover, did in his. Jeremy Paxman has also calculated that only 8% of new entrants in 2008 made any reference to marital breakdown, which is far below the national average. However, by asking the people themselves to submit a short biography, this sometimes leads to them including titbits that would not otherwise be known, and allows the subject to show something of his or her character, rather than being a curriculum vitae, especially in the descriptions of "recreations". From conventional references to fishing, reading or opera (which still feature prominently), listed recreations have included: "Maintaining rusty old cars" (Alastair Balls), "Generally fomenting the overthrow of capitalism" (the shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer John McDonnell), "Anglophobia" (Christopher Murray Grieve) and "Contemplating revenge" (Stephen Chambers).
Bruce Halpenny had been writing ghost stories in the 1960s and encountering ghost stories in his exhaustive research into airfield histories, when he decided they should form the subject of a special book, and so started to add to and research his “ghost-mystery” files about abandoned airfields that "murmur and whisper with ghosts".Ghosts of the old airfields – Daily Mirror – Thursday, 16 August 1984Peter Tory's Diary – Daily Mirror – Monday, 20 August 1984 Halpenny had by 1984 become acknowledged as a respected British military historian, expert in airfield histories, and expert in "RAF ghosts", especially surrounding airfields.Ghosts of War – by Ken Livemore – Titbits – Summer Special 1984, pages 42 – 43 In the 1960s, Halpenny began presenting what he believed to be evidence of paranormal activity on airfields. He also campaigned for the British government to do their part by preserving a Second World War airfield in its original condition for future generations to see, and for the history of each airfield to be recorded fully and the men and sacrifice never forgotten.
Onanuga was born in to royal family of Anikilaya in Ijebu Ode, Ogun State. He started his schools attending both his primary and secondary school in Muslim College Ijebu Ode and finished in 1974 there he went Federal Government College Odogbolu in 1975 to 1977 then he was admitted in University of Lagos for Mass communication from 1977 and graduated in 1980. He works with the African Concord newspaper before that in 1980 he was Ogun States Television authority (OGTVA) for one and half year and joined printing journalism were he works for Guardian then he left there and start his own newspaper/magazine which is The Weekly Titbits then in 1985 he joined The National Concord as a senior writer there he became chief editor in African Concord, together with Seye Kehinde, owner of City People Magazine, Dapo Olorunyomi editor of Premium Times, Sani Kabir who served as chairman in Onigbongbo local government in Ikeja, Babafemi Ojodu senator in Ekiti and Kunle Ajibade chief editor in PM News 1992 they teamed up to set up TheNews Magazine which was founded in 1993.

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