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tittelen

Tittelen is the definite form of the Norwegian noun tittel and refers to the name given to a work or its part. It is the label by which a book, film, music recording, article, or artwork is identified. The tittelen functions as the primary identifier used in citations, catalogs, and discussions about the work. While leitores may encounter the term in Norwegian texts, the underlying concept is shared across languages, with cognate forms such as titel or titeln in Swedish and Danish and a common lineage to Latin titulus.

Etymology and related terms: The word tittel and its definite form tittelen trace back to older European

Typography and conventions: In written usage, conventions distinguish long works from shorter ones. Titles of longer

Digital and bibliographic contexts: In databases and bibliographies, the tittelen is a key data field used

terms
for
an
identifying
label,
with
cognates
in
nearby
languages.
These
forms
ultimately
derive
from
Latin
titulus,
passing
into
medieval
and
modern
European
languages
through
various
routes.
The
concept
remains
consistent:
a
title
names
and
distinguishes
a
creative
work.
works—such
as
novels,
films,
journals,
or
albums—are
typically
set
in
italics.
Titles
of
shorter
works—such
as
articles,
songs,
or
chapter
headings—are
usually
placed
in
quotation
marks.
When
referring
to
a
specific
work,
one
uses
the
definite
form
tittelen
in
Norwegian,
as
in
“tittelen
på
romanen.”
for
indexing,
searching,
and
citation.
Metadata
standards
capture
the
exact
form
of
the
title,
including
subtitles
and
translations,
to
ensure
accurate
identification
and
retrieval
of
the
work.