(Used informally) very small.
1 The ' bittie ' dog seems to have won a sort of canine Victoria Cross.
2 A bittie dog wadna ken what to do wi' keys.
3 And if I'm nae sair mista'en there's a rough bittie o' road before him.
4 Why didn't you say that the ' bittie ' dog was of the Highland breed, Sergeant?
5 Come, come, a wee bittie , just a wee bittie .
6 The wind was blowing at a bittie , but she went up the rigging like a sailor.
7 Yer hair's some bittie langer than Miss Blanche's, I'm thinkin', replied Lisbeth, with satisfaction in her tone.
8 He was cried and exclaimed over by the hysterical ladies, and scolded for a bittie fule by the sergeant.
9 She disappeared, leaving a trail of caressing baby-talk to the effect that she would take good care of muvver's ittie bittie kittie.
10 Mr. Traill kept his own counsel, but at the door he turned: "You'll no' be remembering the bittie terrier that lived in the kirkyard?"
11 "What ails the bittie dog?" There was something here that sobered the thoughtless boys.
12 "I ken but a wee bittie aboot the noises."
13 "What-whathae the police to do wi' bittie dogs?"
14 "The shentleman wanted as much as I could find o' this,"-hesaid-"An 'hehad it a' but this wee bittie .
15 The ' bittie ' dog seems to have won a sort of canine Victoria Cross.
16 A bittie dog wadna ken what to do wi' keys.
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