the distinguishing name of a book, poem, picture, piece of music, or the like.
a descriptive heading or caption, as of a chapter, section, or other part of a book.
title page.
a descriptive or distinctive appellation, especially one belonging to a person by right of rank, office, attainment, etc.: the title of Lord Mayor.
Sports. the championship: He won the title three years in a row.
an established or recognized right to something.
a ground or basis for a claim.
anything that provides a ground or basis for a claim.
Law.
legal right to the possession of property, especially real property.
the ground or evidence of such right.
the instrument constituting evidence of such right.
a unity combining all of the requisites to complete legal ownership.
a division of a statute, lawbook, etc., especially one larger than an article or section.
(in pleading) the designation of one's basis for judicial relief; the cause of action sued upon, as a contract or tort.
Ecclesiastical.
a fixed sphere of work and source of income, required as a condition of ordination.
any of certain Roman Catholic churches in Rome, the nominal incumbents of which are cardinals.
Usually titles.Movies, Television.
a subtitle in the viewer's own language: an Italian movie with English titles.
any written matter inserted into the film or program, especially the list of actors, technicians, writers, etc., contributing to it; credits.
adjective
of or relating to a title: the title story in a collection.
that decides a title: a title bout.
verb (used with object),ti·tled,ti·tling.
to furnish with a title; designate by an appellation; entitle.
Origin of title
First recorded before 950; Middle English, variant of titel,Old English titul, from Latin titulus “superscription, title”
SYNONYMS FOR title
4 designation, denomination.
14 denominate, term, call, style.
SEE SYNONYMS FOR title ON THESAURUS.COM
synonym study for title
4. See name.
OTHER WORDS FROM title
mis·ti·tle,verb (used with object),mis·ti·tled,mis·ti·tling.non·ti·tle,adjectivere·ti·tle,verb (used with object),re·ti·tled,re·ti·tling.un·der·ti·tle,noun
Words nearby title
titillating, titillation, titipounamu, titivate, titlark, title, title catalog, titled, title deed, title entry, titleholder
Simply put, teams like the 2019-20 Heat — with limited playoff experience and inordinate depth — aren’t supposed to vie for NBA titles.
The Miami Heat Act Like They’ve Been Here Before. They (Mostly) Haven’t.|Andres Waters|September 15, 2020|FiveThirtyEight
The House inquiry began after the NLRB’s first attempt to roll back the Obama-era expansion of the joint-employer rule, in a 2017 decision titled Hy-Brand Industrial Contractors.
“Cover Up”: House Democrats Subpoena Documents That NLRB Refused to Share in Ethics Investigation|by Ian MacDougall|September 15, 2020|ProPublica
For their troubles, they’ll get the Phoenix Mercury, who are riding the amazing twin backcourt performances of Skylar Diggins-Smith and Diana Taurasi into serious title contention.
It’s Win Or Go Home This Week In The WNBA Playoffs|Howard Megdal|September 15, 2020|FiveThirtyEight
The title and meta description tags are what users see in search results – write them like a keyword-rich promo.
8 major Google ranking factors — SEO guide|Sponsored Content: SEO PowerSuite|September 15, 2020|Search Engine Land
One of the simplest ways is to mention it one only in the meta-title, meta-description, and URL too.
Partial match domains in 2020: How to optimize and use effectively|Tudor Lodge Consultants|September 14, 2020|Search Engine Watch
But the title of Best Death definitely belongs to Bob Stookey, who got bitten by a zombie then captured by cannibals.
The Red Viper, Zoe Barnes, and the Best Fictional Deaths of 2014|Melissa Leon|January 1, 2015|DAILY BEAST
I guess we know how Bacchus kept his title as the god of wine and intoxication.