Subtitle in a sentence as a noun

It fails to deliver on its subtitle: "Why".

Most software either will need to drop the per cd subtitle, or will split and consider CD1 as separate album from CD2.

Most software sucks at this, even though we have the tags, they are not there.- album subtitle - some albums will have CD1 and CD2 with a subname.

This is why the file sizes can generally end up inflated, people will put all dubs and subtitles into one file.

Despite the article's subtitle, this will be far from "the first secure mobile messaging system.

It's great, and can contain an arbitrary number of audio, video, subtitle, etc tracks.

Subtitle in a sentence as a verb

The submitter seems to have exercised good judgement in using the subtitle but clarifying that the moon was Titan.

A lecturer had his PhD dissertation published by its subtitle because by accident it vanished during the title.

I think the subtitle gets to the heart of the issue: "How can a democratic republic function when the bureaucrats are constantly misleading the people?

They incorrectly haphazardly swap "income" and "wealth":The subtitle says "Explore the occupations and industries of the nation’s wealthiest households.

The article has the fairly vague title "Titan Calling" and the more explanatory subtitle "How a Swedish engineer saved a once-in-a-lifetime mission to Saturn's mysterious moon".

I'd prefer instead that it just be switched to the original title "Nanolaw with Daughter", either with or without the subtitle "Why privacy mattered".While the current title isn't bad, I think it's better to discourage the editorialization of titles, whether by adding tags such as "fiction" or by using catchy excerpts.

Subtitle definitions

noun

translation of foreign dialogue of a movie or TV program; usually displayed at the bottom of the screen

See also: caption

noun

secondary or explanatory title

verb

supply (a movie) with subtitles