English-Thai Dictionary
tittle
N จำนวน เล็กน้อย jot particle jam-nuan-lek-noi
tittle
N จุด (ใน การเขียน หรือ พิมพ์ จุด เครื่องหมาย jud
tittle tattle
VI นินทา gossip nin-ta
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
TITTLE
n.[from tit, small. ] A small particle; a minute part; a jot; an iota.
TITTLE-TATTLE
n.[tattle, doubled. ] 1. Idle trifling talk; empty prattle.
2. An idle trifling talker. [Less proper. ]
TITTLE-TATTLE
v.i.To talk idly; to prate.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
TITTLE
Tit "tle, n. Etym: [OE. titel, titil, apparently a dim. of tit, in the sense of small; cf. G. tüttel a tittle, dim. of OHG. tutta teat. Perhaps, however, the same word as title, n.]
Defn: A particle; a minute part; a jot; an iota. It is easier for heaven and earth to pass, than one tittle of the law to fail. Luke xvi. 17. Every tittle of this prophecy is most exactly verified. South.
TITTLEBAT
TITTLEBAT Tit "tle *bat, n. (Zoöl.)
Defn: The three-spined stickleback. [Prov. Eng. ]
TITTLE-TATTLE
Tit "tle-tat `tle, n. Etym: [A reduplication of tattle. ]
1. Idle, trifling talk; empty prattle. Arbuthnot.
2. An idle, trifling talker; a gossip. [R.] Tatler.
TITTLE-TATTLE
TITTLE-TATTLE Tit "tle-tat `tle, v. i.
Defn: To talk idly; to prate. Shak.
TITTLE-TATTLING
TITTLE-TATTLING Tit "tle-tat `tling, n.
Defn: The act or habit of parting idly or gossiping.
New American Oxford Dictionary
tittle
tit tle |ˈtitl ˈtɪdl | ▶noun [ in sing. ] a tiny amount or part of something: the rules have not been altered one jot or tittle since. • archaic a small written or printed stroke or dot, indicating omitted letters in a word. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Latin titulus (see title ), in medieval Latin ‘small stroke, accent ’; the phrase jot or tittle is from Matt. 5:18.
tittle-tattle
tit tle-tat tle |ˈtɪdl ˌtædl | ▶noun idle talk; gossip. ▶verb [ no obj. ] engage in such talk. ORIGIN early 16th cent.: reduplication of tattle .
Oxford Dictionary
tittle
tit ¦tle |ˈtɪt (ə )l | ▶noun [ in sing. ] a tiny amount or part of something: the rules have not been altered one jot or tittle since. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Latin titulus (see title ), in medieval Latin ‘small stroke, accent ’; the phrase jot or tittle is from Matt. 5:18.
tittle-tattle
tittle-tattle |ˈtɪt (ə )ltat (ə )l | ▶noun [ mass noun ] idle talk; gossip. ▶verb [ no obj. ] engage in such talk. ORIGIN early 16th cent.: reduplication of tattle .
American Oxford Thesaurus
tittle-tattle
tittle-tattle noun See gossip.
Oxford Thesaurus
tittle
tittle noun he had passed the night without a tittle of sleep: bit, tiny amount, scrap, shred, speck, iota, particle, ounce, whit, jot, jot or tittle, atom, crumb, morsel, fragment, grain, drop, hint, touch, trace, suggestion, whisper, suspicion, scintilla, spot, mite, modicum; Irish stim; informal smidgen, smidge.
tittle-tattle
tittle-tattle noun she would never listen to tittle-tattle. See gossip (sense 1 of the noun ). ▶verb he was tittle-tattling all over the village. See gossip (sense 1 of the verb ).
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
tittle
tit tle /tɪ́t (ə )l /名詞 C 1 (i, jなどの )小点 .2 〖やや古; 通例疑問文 否定文で; 単数形で 〗わずかの, 微少の .
tittle-tattle
t í ttle-t à ttle 名詞 U 動詞 自動詞 うわさ話 [むだ話 ] (をする ).