BETITLE | • betitle v. (Obsolete) To furnish with a title; to entitle. • BETITLE v. to furnish with a title or titles. |
DISENTITLE | • disentitle v. (Transitive) To deprive of title, right or claim. • DISENTITLE v. to deprive of title or claim. |
ENTITLE | • entitle v. To give a title to. (Can we add an example for this sense?) • entitle v. To dignify by an honorary designation. • entitle v. To give power or authority (to do something). |
INTITLE | • intitle v. (Archaic or nonstandard) Alternative form of entitle. • INTITLE v. to give a right to, also ENTITLE, INTITULE. |
MISTITLE | • mistitle v. (Transitive) To title incorrectly; to give the wrong name to. • MISTITLE v. to call by the wrong title. |
NONTITLE | • nontitle adj. Not of or pertaining to a title. • NONTITLE adj. pertaining to an event where the title is not at stake. |
RETITLE | • retitle v. To provide with a new title. • RETITLE v. to give a new title to. |
SUBTITLE | • subtitle n. (Authorship) A heading below or after a title. • subtitle n. (Cinematography, television) Textual versions of the dialogue in films (and similar media such as television… • subtitle v. To create subtitles for the dialogue in a film. |
SUPERTITLE | • supertitle n. A surtitle. • supertitle v. To surtitle. • SUPERTITLE n. a surtitle, a printed translation of the libretto of an opera in a language foreign to the audience. |
SURTITLE | • surtitle n. A translation of a segment of the libretto or other text or sometimes a brief summary of the plot projected… • surtitle v. To provide surtitles for a performance. • SURTITLE n. a translation printed above a performance. |
TITLE | • title n. An appellation given to a person or family to signify either veneration, official position, social rank… • title n. (Property law) Legal right to ownership of a property; a deed or other certificate proving this. • title n. In canon law, that by which a beneficiary holds a benefice. |