India should not consider Kashmir a
tidbit to swallow.
Strangest
tidbit: Only primates, bats and elephant shrews have menstrual periods.
An interesting
tidbit was buried at the end of a long article in the New York Times by Brian Stelter about the coverage of the gun control debate by Fox News, and about how, to the limited extent it was covered, it was to defend gun rights.
The researchers studied mother-to-be "
Tidbit" after she had died, finding a well-developed embryo--even though
Tidbit had not been near male blacktips for eight years.
Tidbit: Annabeth will have a new boss this season as well as two new investigators who will help prosecute ripped-from-the-headlines cases.
"The striking thing about the vast efforts and expenditures of the prosecution was the miserable
tidbit of material it used to send Mrs.
C) spill each and every juicy
tidbit. It's just too good to keep to yourself.
Awaiting them are media swarms voraciously devouring any
tidbit of news they can exploit and euphoric crowds of religious zealots.
The helpful graph, the
tidbit of data, that breaking news item that illustrates the depth and importance of your mission as head of sales, information boss or chief of finance.
In snail-mail days we would have included that
tidbit in a quarterly newsletter.
The news was first broken by the President's wife (Stockard Channing) to his chief of staff (John Spencer), though she ended the scene with one unfortunate
tidbit of misinformation: "A fever could be life-threatening." (In fact, a fever is no more life-threatening for people with MS than it is for the general population.)
And what odds that the child will eat a juicy
tidbit?
They take a
tidbit from a male's beak or stare intently at the ground.
His experience visiting a nasty cat results in a fun contest for a fallen Turkey
Tidbit in an event all ages will relish.
by Barry Fletcher Unity Publishers, Inc., July 2003, $19.95 ISBN 0-974-34550-4 Fletcher writes that "Sex is the most powerful force on earth, and hair is a symbol of its expression." He takes this theory throughout his book and throws in the occasional historical
tidbit, as well as important medical findings.