tidbit
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From tid (“fond, tender, nice”) + bit (“morsel”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈtɪd.bɪt/, [ˈtʰɪd̚.bɪt̚]
Audio (US): (file) Audio (General American): (file) - Rhymes: -ɪt
Noun
tidbit (plural tidbits) (American spelling)
- A part of poultry when prepared as food
- 1846, French Domestic Cookery, Combining Elegance with Economy:
- The best mode of cutting up this Poultry is by raising, one after another, the four members, beginning by a thigh and wing on the same side, the tidbits and the white-meats; then break off the rump, and cut the body horizontally. Divide each thigh into two, and wing into three pieces; the body and the rump making six distinct ones; the white meats remaining entire. Place each piece on the dish in such a manner that all may be seen. All this should be done as quickly and cleverly as possible, in order to prevent the pieces getting cold. The tidbit is a veiny piece under the thigh, at the beginning of wing.
- 1875, Death of Hon. Samuel Hooper:
- If in any case he ever reserved the tidbits of his own table for his own taste, he was never weary of sending the whole joint, tidbit and all, nay even when the whole joint was itself a tidbit, to his neighbor's table.
- A tasty morsel (of food).
- 1887, William Elliot Griffis, The Mikado's Empire:
- Only a tidbit to a ravenous mouth. (Said when the little tidbit Denmark flies down the huge gullet of Prussia; or when Saghalin falls into Russia's maw.)
- A short item of news, gossip, or information.
- 2021 April 21, Daniel Dale, “Fact-checking Nancy Mace’s claim that DC wouldn’t ‘qualify’ as a single congressional district”, in CNN[1]:
- In the congressional apportionment that followed the 1910 census, the average district had 210,328 people, according to the Census Bureau. We make note of this historical tidbit simply to emphasize the obvious fact that DC’s current population is far greater than the population of many of the districts of generations past.
- 2021 August 20, Brian Lowry, “‘Gossip’ charts how tabloid tattlers ‘escaped from their cages’ and rippled through the media”, in CNN[2]:
- “Gossip” is about a lot more than just juicy tidbits and the columnists that peddle them, presenting a multifaceted look at gossip’s role in the newspaper/media ecosystem and at Rupert Murdoch’s enterprises in particular.
- Generically, any small thing.
- 1894, Richard Soule, Loomis Joseph Campbell, Pronouncing Handbook of Words Often Mispronounced and of Words as to which a Choice of Pronunciation is Allowed:
- This little book is very entertaining—quite a literary tidbit.
Translations
a tasty morsel of food
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short item of news, gossip, or information
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