0 a small piece of interesting information, or a small dish of pleasant-tasting food: --
Grandma always has a few titbits for the children if they're visiting at lunchtime.
This magazine is full of juicy titbits (= small pieces of interesting information, especially about other people's private lives).
Our guide gave us some interesting titbits about the history of the castle.
But he has had no appetite for any of these tough titbits.
Every journalist in the place was trying to pick up titbits.
If you treat democracy with titbits of unrelated policy, as if you were handing mixed caramels to children, you will go wrong.
Quite clearly, there is something more involved here than merely titbits of information being given to newspapers to prevent an interesting news story.
It is clear that they have nothing of substance to contribute, which is why they are reduced to scavenging for peripheral titbits.
Sometimes a little titbit escapes the censor and something slips out.
She sees an ethical distinction between rabbits in a 2 ft sq cage that are reared for expensive titbits in restaurants and those other rabbits.
Out of the best empirical evidence and the best models available, they conjure up titbits of comfort for the consumption of their political paymasters.