Title in a sentence as a noun

The title of this link is very misleading.

Also the mouseover on your site title is sexy.

Can we perhaps edit "singularity is near" out of the title?

You don't get to screw around with other people's lives and continue to possess the title of "good guy".

I like how all the comments so far are defending the fact that the patent isn't quite as broad as the title suggests.

The [Y] icon already tells me the tab points to Hacker News, so an excerpt of the title would help more than the site name.

Title in a sentence as a verb

Also, the original title of this thread was about a thousand times more informative.

People like me and Jose, homebred Americans if ya will, are forever tarnished with this inherited title.

Request: change the title by appending "fiction" so that folks like me don't start reading to try and figure out how the **** a person can be sued while in the womb.

I think the biggest problem in reverting to original titles is that oftentimes, the original title is not bad, but it only makes sense in the context of the original blog in which it appears.

The title, "Contents", was set in very heavy type which happened to be an unexpected edge case in the classifier and it matched the "o" with the "e" and "n" and output "Contoots".The classifier was adjusted and these errors mostly went away.

Title definitions

noun

a heading that names a statute or legislative bill; may give a brief summary of the matters it deals with; "Title 8 provided federal help for schools"

See also: rubric

noun

the name of a work of art or literary composition etc.; "he looked for books with the word `jazz' in the title"; "he refused to give titles to his paintings"; "I can never remember movie titles"

noun

a general or descriptive heading for a section of a written work; "the novel had chapter titles"

noun

the status of being a champion; "he held the title for two years"

See also: championship

noun

a legal document signed and sealed and delivered to effect a transfer of property and to show the legal right to possess it; "he signed the deed"; "he kept the title to his car in the glove compartment"

See also: deed

noun

an identifying appellation signifying status or function: e.g. `Mr.' or `General'; "the professor didn't like his friends to use his formal title"

noun

an established or recognized right; "a strong legal claim to the property"; "he had no documents confirming his title to his father's estate"; "he staked his claim"

See also: claim

noun

(usually plural) written material introduced into a movie or TV show to give credits or represent dialogue or explain an action; "the titles go by faster than I can read"

noun

an appellation signifying nobility; "`your majesty' is the appropriate title to use in addressing a king"

noun

an informal right to something; "his claim on her attentions"; "his title to fame"

See also: claim

verb

give a title to

See also: entitle

verb

designate by an identifying term; "They styled their nation `The Confederate States'"

See also: style