TITBIT

tit·​bit ˈtit-ˌbit 

less common variant of tidbit

1

a choice morsel of food

2

a choice or pleasing bit (as of information)

Examples of titbit in a Sentence

Recent Examples on the Web

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More

The instruction booklet is thorough, and filled with lots of neat science titbits and facts too.—Ian Stokes, Space.com, 23 May 2025Among other titbits, Hip-Hop fans are 130 percent more likely to buy merchandise from an artist’s online store than the average music streamer, its year-end report also found.—Georg Szalai, The Hollywood Reporter, 15 Jan. 2025

Some other titbits in the DealSheet caught my eye: Barcelona are monitoring Spain, Euro 2024 and RB Leipzig star Dani Olmo.—Phil Hay, The Athletic, 23 July 2024Sussex was a master at lacing seemingly innocent lifestyle guides with genuinely revealing titbits about her life.—Kate Lloyd, Vogue, 17 Mar. 2024Anderson said that one titbit from the essay by Wyatt — who has a 3-year-old namesake grandson that Anderson and former partner Benjamin Maisani welcomed in April 2023 — especially struck a chord with him.—Bailey Richards, Peoplemag, 29 Nov. 2023Two and a half years later, Ingwe’s favorite spot is still The Café Grill, where staff continue to take care of her, treating her to tasty titbits and spoiling her in general.—Sandra MacGregor, Forbes, 2 Apr. 2023See Less

https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/titbit

TITBIT was last modified: August 3rd, 2025 by Jovan Stosic

Leave a Reply