tittle



jot and tittle

The smallest detail(s). "Jot," derived from the word for the Greek letter "iota," is a small amount, while a "tittle" is the dot over a lowercase i. Make sure every jot and tittle in the contract is perfect. We can't lose money over some typo or technicality.
See also: and, jot, tittle

tittle-tattle

  (informal)
talk about other people's lives that is usually unkind or not true They know that tittle-tattle about the royal family helps to sell newspapers.

jot or tittle

The slightest change. In the King James version of Matthew 5:18 we read, “For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled.” A “jot” was an iota, a very small quantity (we still use the expression “not one iota of truth”); a tittle was a tiny accent mark. Accordingly, to have said “not one jot or tittle” was a very erudite way of refusing to make even the most minor alteration.
See also: jot, tittle

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Ealdgy&Eth;-Anglo-Saxon
AustĖJa-Lithuanian, Baltic Mythology
ShannenSHAN-ənEnglish (Modern)
LÜTfÜ-Turkish
SeyfettİN-Turkish
MŚCisŁAw-Polish