- on the tit
- Australian Slang(of a baby) breast-feeding
English dialects glossary. 2013.
English dialects glossary. 2013.
The Tit and the Moon — Infobox Film name = The Tit and the Moon producer = Andrés Vicente Gómez director = Bigas Luna writer = Cuca Canals Bigas Luna Frédéric Lasaygues Josep Bargalló music = Nicola Piovani cinematography = José Luis Alcaine editing = Carmen Frías… … Wikipedia
Tit for tat — is a highly effective strategy in game theory for the iterated prisoner s dilemma. It was first introduced by Anatol Rapoport in Robert Axelrod s two tournaments, held around 1980. Based on the English saying meaning equivalent retaliation ( tit… … Wikipedia
Tit Berrypecker — Conservation status Least Concern (IUCN 3.1) Scientific classification Kingdo … Wikipedia
The Bill (series 14) — The Bill Series 14 Country of origin United Kingdom No. of episodes 121 Broadcast Original channel ITV … Wikipedia
On the tit — (of a baby) breast feeding … Dictionary of Australian slang
Tit (bird) — Chickadee redirects here. For other uses, see Chickadee (disambiguation). Tits and chickadees Crested Tit in Scotland … Wikipedia
Tit-spinetail — Taxobox name = Tit spinetails regnum = Animalia phylum = Chordata classis = Aves ordo = Passeriformes familia = Furnariidae genus = Leptasthenura genus authority = Reichenbach, 1853 subdivision ranks = Species subdivision =10, see textTit… … Wikipedia
Tit-Tyrants — Taxobox name = Tit Tyrants image caption = Agile Tit Tyrant ( Anairetes agilis ) regnum = Animalia phylum = Chordata classis = Aves ordo = Passeriformes familia = Tyrannidae genus = Anairetes genus authority = Reichenbach, 1850 subdivision ranks … Wikipedia
tit — English has three separate words tit. The oldest, ‘breast’ [OE], belongs to a West Germanic family of terms for ‘breast’ or ‘nipple’ that also includes German zitze and Dutch tit: it presumably originated in imitation of a baby’s sucking sounds.… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
tit — English has three separate words tit. The oldest, ‘breast’ [OE], belongs to a West Germanic family of terms for ‘breast’ or ‘nipple’ that also includes German zitze and Dutch tit: it presumably originated in imitation of a baby’s sucking sounds.… … Word origins