˜yÐÄvlog

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intitle

[ en-tahyt-l ]

verb (used with object)

intitled, intitling.
  1. a less common variant of entitle.


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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

The qualifier intext: will search within the body, while intitle: will search only within a page title.

From

Search for word in the body, title or URL of a page Facebook Twitter Pinterest intitle: search Photograph: Samuel Gibbs for the Guardian Sometimes you only want to find text either within the URL, body or title of a page.

From

The Virtues of this Gentleman intitle him to Respect: He is pious without Hypocrisy, generous without Ostentation, magnificent without Pageantry, officious meerly for the Pleasure of obliging, a Courtier without Servility, a Man strictly attach'd to his King and his Country, learned without being positive, a great Orator, a good Bishop, and a wise Minister, always ready to embrace a good Proposal, and firm to support it, laborious, vigilant, acting only out of Principle, and by consequence susceptible of Friendship, and scorning Revenge.

From

When these mountains of congealed Factions shall by the Sun-shine of Gods Mercy, and the splendor of your Vertues, be thawed and dissipated; and the abused Vulgar shall have learned, that none are greater Oppressours of their Estates, Liberties, and Consciences, then those men that intitle themselves The Patrons and Vindicators of them, only to usurp power over them: Let then no passion betray You to any study of revenge upon those, whose own sin and folly will sufficiently punish them in due time.

From

The fourthe thinge ys, that, in the catalogue of the auctors, you haue omytted many auctors vouched by chaucer; and therefore did rightlye intitle yt, moost, and not all, of the auctors cited by Geffrye Chaucer.

From

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