Use "tidbits" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "tidbits" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "tidbits", or refer to the context using the word "tidbits" in the English Dictionary.

1. She offered Molly tidbits: a chicken drumstick, some cheese.

2. Trestle tables were laid out with plates of ham, prawns and tidbits.

3. Crows will make off with shreds of roadkill and store tidbits in trees

4. 7 Information baubles and still usable pop-culture tidbits are strewn about.

5. So all part of my little actor' s salad bar of emotional tidbits

6. Familiar acrobats of the air, Ring-Billed Gulls nimbly pluck tossed tidbits from on high

7. I suspect you will be too busy enjoying the smorgasbord of local tidbits, though.

8. Should we work against any tendency to enjoy hearing tidbits or accounts about people whom we know?

9. Chasten, husband of Transportation Secretary Pete, shared several tidbits with Rogers about their Washington life so far.

10. The other one that I use these yummy Craisin tidbits in is the brocolli, red onion and Craisin salad

11. Frigate birds soared effortlessly overhead, performing magnificent aerial acrobatics, stealing fish in midair from other birds, and vying for tidbits discarded by fishermen.

12. Check out my latest novel below, and follow me on my blog for exciting updates and tidbits about my Authorish journey! Rise of the Forgotten DESTINY

13. Commonplace “was a kind of solitary version of the original web logs: an archive of interesting tidbits that one encountered during one’s textual browsing,” notes Steven Johnson

14. Chock full of great little tidbits about every aspect of life as it happens in the Bayous, from the earliest human settlements all the way to WWII.

15. He also shares in his book these banana tidbits : what I just referred to as the banana tree is in fact the world's biggest herb; the fruit is actually a gigantic berry.

16. Did you know that Blubberhead Roseanne Barr has a blog? It's a marvelous place, full of all sorts of interesting tidbits that dribble out of her ears on a daily basis.

17. Older is a marvelous writer: "On a normal summer night Manhattan sizzled with hollers, guffaws and arguments, a million tidbits of gossip that warbled and Bassooned down airways and over rooptops

18. “Anatomizing” is a new verb some use to describe the breaking apart of a complex entity such as the human body, into isolated tidbits of information for study, which can never equal the complex, integrated whole

19. "Anatomizing" is a new verb some use to describe the breaking apart of a complex entity such as the human body, into isolated tidbits of information for study, which can never equal the complex, integrated whole

20. Then along comes Cavalry, an app that shows everyone what is possible in a 2D animation application designed for motion designers and animators — And the tidbits that we’ve already seen of Cavalry has already made an enormous impact.

21. ‘The Infinifilm menu is constantly Barraging the viewer with tidbits, interviews, and best of all, the reinsertion of deleted material.’ ‘I had too much adrenaline to answer back Carlozio who had taken advantage of my quietness and was Barraging me with the most annoyance he could muster.’

22. "Abysses" by Pascal Quignard is neatly aphoristic; it contains enticing tidbits from folklore and history; it is liberally sprinkled with philosophical dust; and at its heart there is the notion of "the erstwhile" - that the present is haunted by the forgotten/unknowable past

23. On a normal summer night, Manhattan sizzled with hollers, guffaws, and arguments, a million tidbits of gossip that warbled and Bassooned down alleyways and over rooftops, across bustling avenues and through dingy saloons, back out into the streets where they were chewed on until all the juice was extracted, and then discarded to make room for the next morsel.

24. On a normal summer night, Manhattan sizzled with hollers, guffaws, and arguments, a million tidbits of gossip that warbled and Bassooned down alleyways and over rooftops, across bustling avenues and through dingy saloons, back out into the streets where they were chewed on until all the juice was extracted, and then discarded to make room for the next morsel.

25. These small compact women, who remind me of my own grandmothers years ago, are not, as one might expect, from Silhanoukville nor are they even Cambodian. I overhear them talking among themselves in Viet, in the heavy, flat southern accent that hangs well in the humid air. When I inquire about their “que” (home village), most gestured eastward to Chau Doc, a port town on the Cambodian border. They have left home and journeyed to a neighboring country for the small privilege of selling tidbits of food from their yoke-baskets. For a moment, I wonder unreasonably if Bao, my long-lost childhood friend might be among them—a reflex or, perhaps, an affliction of trauma. So, day after day, for weeks on end, I gravitate to beach to eat grilled squids and to hear their stories.