A buyer shelled out $718,750 for one of the most controversial wooden planks in cinematic history: the door frame panel that saved Rose's life in the 1997 film "Titanic."
Hey Leonardo - She might like you for you, but she won in the end.
I didn’t say that was it’s title but general when referring to something you can use “the” proceeding it, like “the Brooklyn bridge”. Or like “door from THE titanic sold for…” You wouldn’t say “door from titanic sold for …”
When you WOULD phrase it like that is when ‘Titanic’ is a title and you are referencing it in a headline.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titanic
it has never been “The Titanic”
I didn’t say that was it’s title but general when referring to something you can use “the” proceeding it, like “the Brooklyn bridge”. Or like “door from THE titanic sold for…” You wouldn’t say “door from titanic sold for …”
When you WOULD phrase it like that is when ‘Titanic’ is a title and you are referencing it in a headline.
I knew this from basic grammar lessons in grade school. I didn’t even graduate high school. I’m a bit sad this needs to be explained.
Maybe if you’re American 🤢
It’s a Us based publication you silly goose, why wouldn’t they use proper grammar for that context?
Get out of here with that incivility