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单词 newspaper
释义
newspapernews‧pa‧per /ˈnjuːsˌpeɪpə $ ˈnuːzˌpeɪpər/ ●●● S2 W2 noun Examples
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER DICTIONARIES
  • a local newspaper
  • Hearst owned several newspapers.
EXAMPLES FROM THE CORPUS
  • Despite the evidence to the contrary, most of Monday morning's newspapers subscribed to the Army's version.
  • For the newspaper industry, the news has not been good for years.
  • In addition to all these magazines and newspapers there are trade newsletters.
  • It had been cut from a newspaper.
  • Jack probably read Gatsby for the same reason he read every newspaper story and book and saw every movie about gangland.
  • That would be a matter of opinion; he had a newspaper which he kept looking at, and shaking out.
  • The virtual explosion of community newspapers and networking newsletters is another example of alternatives to mainstream media.
Thesaurus
THESAURUS
· The New York Times is a popular daily newspaper.
a newspaper. Paper is more common than newspaper in everyday English: · There was an interesting article in the local paper today.· the Sunday papers
newspapers and news magazines in general, and the people who write for them: · the freedom of the press· The press are always interested in stories about the royal family.
newspapers, magazines, television, radio, and the Internet, considered as a group that provides news and information: · This issue has received a lot of attention in the media.· Her public image was shaped by the media.
a newspaper that has small pages, a lot of photographs, short stories, and not much serious news: · The tabloids are full of stories about her and her boyfriend.
British English a serious newspaper printed on large sheets of paper, with news about politics, finance, and foreign affairs: · the quality broadsheets
the newspapers that give news about the whole country where they are printed, in contrast to local newspapers: · The results of the nationwide survey became headlines in the nationals.
the daily newspapers: · The dailies reported the story.
parts of a newspaper
a piece of writing in a newspaper about a particular subject: · an article on the education reforms
a piece of writing in a newspaper about an event: · newspaper reports on the war
a report in a newspaper about an event, especially one that is not very serious or reliable: · You can’t always believe what you read in newspaper stories.
the title of an important newspaper article, printed in large letters above the article. The headlines are the titles of the most important stories on the front page: · The singer’s drug problem has been constantly in the headlines.
the page on the front of a newspaper which has the most important news stories: · The story was all over the front page.
the pages in a newspaper dealing with a particular area of news such as sports, business, or entertainment: · the financial pages of The Times· the arts section
the page of a newspaper on which the editor of a newspaper and other people express their opinions about the news, rather than just giving facts: · an editorial on the vaccination programme
an article on a particular subject or by a particular writer that appears regularly: · his weekly column on gardening
Longman Language Activatornewspapers and magazines
a set of large folded sheets of paper containing news, articles, pictures etc, which is printed and sold every day or every week: · Can I have a look at your newspaper, please?· It says in the paper that they're getting divorced.Sunday paper (=a paper that is sold every Sunday, and has more pages than papers sold on other days): · I like to sit in bed and read the Sunday papers.local paper (=a newspaper that gives news mainly about the town or area where it is printed): · Did you see Dave's picture in the local paper?national newspaper: · "Asian Week" is a national newspaper printed in San Francisco.daily/weekly newspaper: · She works as a sportswriter for the town's major daily newspaper, The Arizona Daily Star.
a large, thin book with a paper cover, often printed on shiny paper, which contains stories, articles, photographs, and sometimes also news: · I bought some magazines for the trip - Cosmopolitan and Vanity Fair.· a photography magazine· Hillary Clinton is featured on the cover of this week's Time magazine.women's/men's magazine (=a magazine intended especially for women/men): · a model turned TV presenter, who has been on the cover of all the men's magazines
also glossies British a magazine for women printed on shiny paper, that has lots of photographs of fashionable clothes, and advertisements for beauty products: · Cosmopolitan, the original glossy for young womenthe glossies British (=these magazines considered as a group): · We've seen her golden smile and her figure in the glossies again and again.
newspapers and the people who write for them: · Do you think the press has too much influence on politics?· Princess Diana was followed by the press wherever she went.the popular press (=newspapers that are read by a lot of people, usually for entertainment rather than for serious news): · Smith strongly denies reports in the popular press that he is addicted to cocaine.the gutter press British (=newspapers that have an extremely low standard of reporting - used to show strong disapproval): · His wife walked out, selling her story to the gutter press, and accusing him of being an alcoholic.the quality press British (=serious newspapers with a high standard of reporting): · The issue was debated by academics, and some sections of the quality press.
all the organizations that are involved in providing information to the public, especially newspapers, television, and radio: · The letter must have been leaked to the media by a White House official.· The judge is worried that comments in the media might affect the result of the trial.
British newspapers printed on large sheets of paper, especially serious newspapers that people respect: · broadsheets such as The Times and The Telegraph· Broadsheets are aimed at an educated middle and upper-class readership.
a newspaper that does not contain much serious news, but has stories about famous people, sport, sex etc - use this especially about newspapers that you think are not serious enough: · She claimed that she had had an affair with the President, and sold her story to the tabloids.
WORD SETS
associated company, nounboardroom, nounBros., cartel, nounchain, nounCo., collective, nouncom, concern, nounconglomerate, nouncontractor, nounco-op, nouncooperative, adjectivecooperative, nounCorp., corporate, adjectivecorporation, noundivision, noundivisional, adjectiveempire, nounenterprise, nounexecutive, adjectiveexpand, verbexpansion, nounfail, verbgiant, noungroup, nounInc., incorporated, adjectiveindie, nounindustrial espionage, nounin-house, adjectiveinside, adverbinterest, nounjoint-stock company, nounlimited company, nounLtd, Messrs, multinational, adjectivemultinational, nounnewspaper, nounoutsourcing, nounparent company, nounpayroll, nounplc, nounpractice, nounprofit and loss account, nounproprietary, adjectivepty, public company, nounpublic corporation, nounpublic limited company, nounreceivership, nounregistered office, nounshipper, nounsubsidiary, nounsupplier, nountakeover, nountop-heavy, adjective
Collocations
COLLOCATIONS FROM THE ENTRYverbs
· Which newspaper do you read?
(=buy one regularly)· We don’t get a newspaper; we tend to watch the news on TV.
· I saw in the newspaper that he had died.
· Her photo appeared in all the newspapers.
(=has an article on something)· The newspapers reported that the police were treating the death as a suicide.
ADJECTIVES/NOUN + newspaper
· The story was in all the national newspapers.
· The store advertises in the local newspaper.
(=one that is published every day/week/Sunday)· Do you get a daily newspaper?
(=a small-sized newspaper, especially one with not much serious news)· Their wedding made the headlines in all the tabloid newspapers.
British English (=a newspaper with a lot of serious news and good writing)· The story has not been given as much coverage in the quality newspapers.
newspaper + NOUN
· I read quite an interesting newspaper report on the war.
· ‘Wine is good for you’ announced a recent newspaper headline.
(=a regular article in a newspaper written by a particular journalist)· She writes a regular newspaper column about gardening.
(=a story cut out of a newspaper)· I found some old newspaper cuttings of the band's first concert in Liverpool.
· She was fed up with being followed by newspaper reporters.
· Newspaper editors have a lot of power.
British English (=owner)· Ultimately, it’s the newspaper proprietor who decides what goes into the newspaper.
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
 Many companies will only advertise in the Sunday paper.
· I got the apartment through a newspaper advertisement.
· I tried putting an advertisement for lodgers in the local paper.
 Both candidates are spending millions on television advertising.
· He writes newspaper articles in the Guardian.
· A couple of articles appeared in local papers, but nothing else.
 old press clippings about movie stars
· He’s the writer of a weekly newspaper column.
(=organized by and advertised in a newspaper)· I entered a newspaper competition for young photographer of the year.
· During the war he was employed as a newspaper correspondent.
(=provided by television newspapers etc)· The private lives of celebrities get a lot of newspaper coverage.
 Margot sent him some press cuttings about the wedding.
· I bought an evening newspaper to read on my way home.
· The story dominated newspaper headlines around the world.
· The case attracted newspaper reporters from all over the world.
 a multi-millionaire property tycoon
 He bought a copy from a newspaper vendor.
COLLOCATIONS FROM THE CORPUSADJECTIVE
· Nothing irritates a daily newspaper picture editor more than an allegedly topical photograph sent to him by post.· The number of jobs advertised in daily metropolitan newspapers in December fell 1. 8 percent.· In addition, the opposition will be allowed to publish a daily newspaper with a circulation of 500,000.· If an elected official did anything remotely similar, the editorial boards of both daily newspapers would howl for their heads.· Miss N'Grabbit slapped a copy of the daily newspaper on to the polished alloy boardroom table of Mild County Enterprises.· Even old forgery charges of 1813 were resurrected by the daily newspapers.· The popular daily newspapers are much more likely to carry such stories today than twenty years ago.· The telegraph also brought a sense of timeliness to daily newspapers.
· It was all in the local newspaper.· Miss Monti ran the local newspaper that had been in her family for years.· There, if the admirable local newspaper is to be believed, both religion and the family are accorded great importance!· Many regional newspapers as well as local newspapers are also available over the Internet.· The local radio and newspaper have announced it and the papers will be covering the event when it takes place.· There are pictures of the wreck in the local newspaper.· Eleven years later I worked with him as a local newspaper reporter when he was a club manager at Ayr United.
· The protest event data are coded from a reading of the Monday issues of major newspapers in the four countries.· At most major newspapers, publishers control opinion pages but leave decisions on news stories to editors.· Much other statistical and record material also appears from time to time in major newspapers and economic commercial and industrial periodicals.· His family home in Aba was the main distributing center and office for three major newspapers in his country.· I wrote to the editors of all the major newspapers and television channels asking them to cover the anniversary.· In quest of mass circulation and advertising support, the major city newspapers gradually developed a tradition of political and journalistic independence.· During the summer debates on New York rent control, virtually every major city newspaper editorialized against controls.· No review in a major newspaper.
· A national newspaper had called for an army of Mansell fans to turn out, but fewer than two hundred actually did.· Contemporary national newspapers display a number of different positions at all three levels.· He has been in contact with Eddy Shah, the former national newspaper proprietor.· One was reported in a national newspaper and one in a local newspaper.· He knew what worked in popular national Sunday newspapers and what didn't.· He has emphasised public relations to some effect: a single article in a national newspaper brought 1000 enquiries about Micromodeller.· But it certainly added to the strength of the Crossman case that a great national newspaper had lined up alongside him.· It is also asking for air-time on radio and television, and for access to national and provincial newspapers and magazines.
· Before he cleaned himself with old newspaper, Holly knew the germ of his idea.· And when the soles got so thin that water would leak in, Kresge would line his shoes with old newspapers.· Miss Print For this you have a young girl covered in old newspapers held on with scotch tape or cotton.· Missus Hall would relieve herself on old newspapers in the alleyways on Central Avenue.· As for being the oldest surviving newspaper, this claim is invalidated by the Worcester Post Man founded in 1709.· But the 65-year-old newspaper heiress had other ideas, said Thorstenson.· He used to collect old newspapers for fish-and-chip shops.· My first tip for the wise traveller is pack as many old newspapers as you can, up to the maximum permitted weight.
· The husband is described as a yacht-sailing tycoon who is the darling of the New York tabloid newspapers.· A woman told a tabloid newspaper that she maintained a long-term affair with Clinton while he was governor of Arkansas.· The tabloid newspapers would have a field day.· With his other hand he turned the pages of a tabloid newspaper, barely pausing to read the words.· It is hard not to sympathise with those simple-minded viewers and tabloid newspaper editors who mistake the characters for the actors.· Most tabloid newspapers are emphatically graphic in the presentation of their headlines and subheadings.· Each window was no larger than a sheet of tabloid newspaper and there was clearly no upstairs to the place.· Or does he want to gag free speech and have every tabloid newspaper supporting the Tory party?
· Q: You got your start at a weekly newspaper?· Thousands of people knew him from his radio and television appearances and weekly newspaper column for the Los Angeles Times.· From Tuesday weekly newspapers may be left with a burden which, sadly, many will be unable to carry.· Local weekly newspapers: Most towns and the suburbs of large cities have their own weekly newspapers.
NOUN
· In the past two months there has been a rash of newspaper advertisements for unlicensed patches available by mail order.· You will be choosing the organization and then selling yourself to them, rather than relying solely upon answering newspaper advertisements.· Meanwhile, their opponents are busy taking out newspaper advertisements, buying air time and working the telephones.· The previous day Bull took out a newspaper advertisement promising to do better in future.· The Northern responded to three newspaper advertisements placed by people selling the sought-after vouchers and asked the selling price.· Speed is of the essence when following up newspaper advertisements.· The panellists were selected from a group of 111 people who had responded to newspaper advertisements.· Two promoted silk stockings and Florence Stack appeared in newspaper advertisements praising Tokalon beauty products.
· The second novel, of course, and then the shorter pieces - stories and some newspaper articles, and so on.· The dwindling supplies of crude oil and natural gas are frequently discussed in newspaper articles.· The Sunday newspaper articles had come out the week before last, and were still bringing in letters.· When Dole arrived in Wisconsin three days later to give his speech, newspaper articles were quoting Clinton on welfare.· They only realised he was autistic after reading a newspaper article on the symptoms.· Under this cassette, bound with a rubber band, was an envelope stuffed with paper and yellowing newspaper articles.· First, a trick I learnt from a newspaper article about a discovery in psychology.· Beneath the letter was a xeroxed newspaper article listing all the bars in the city.
· Letters to be read out were spread all over the desk, along with newspaper clippings and research notes on my two guests.· And where, Holtz wondered in a postscript, were the newspaper clippings from Melbourne?· But remember those old newspaper clippings mentioning that he'd been hanged by the Home Office's principal Official Executioner?· Eli showed him newspaper clippings, photos of bodies that had been ground under tank treads.· His pocketed stash of newspaper clippings apparently fuelled vivid conversations.· She was still holding the newspaper clipping about the woman who committed suicide when her son failed his college entrance exam.· It is filled with newspaper clippings of championships, trophies and pictures of a younger Impastato, hair as black as ink.· Bill Maher hoists a fat folder filled with newspaper clippings on to a virtually empty desk in his new Los Angeles office.
· Best-selling books, magazine articles and newspaper columns publicised his ideas.· Tony Lewis, the chairman, set out the rationale in his newspaper column.· Thousands of people knew him from his radio and television appearances and weekly newspaper column for the Los Angeles Times.· So disillusioned and grumpy is he that he writes a local newspaper column on the subject.· Can this city survive without its traditional battalions of colorful characters swaggering through saloons and newspaper columns?· Instead, the information related solely to a forthcoming newspaper column which recommended the shares of particular companies.· Should he try to write a newspaper column?
· Politicians, clergymen and newspaper columnists denounced it as brutal and abhorrent: no more than human cockfighting.· The vendors' protests inspired newspaper columnists on influential papers to come to their defense.
· Equally intriguing are the missives from my brother, the newspaper cuttings that arrive every three weeks or so.· I've had newspaper cutting sent to me by other people.· Then she remembered Kev's little bundle of newspaper cuttings, and she turned to Bri with a kiss.· Prints of every size showing every kind of combat from medieval jousting to the latest newspaper cuttings of the Zulu War.· There are special collections of country information, newspaper cuttings, market research reports and theses.· This will include newspaper cuttings and the references referred to above, although taking care not to breach copyright laws.· It should contain law reports, books on personal injury, journals, box files of the newspaper cuttings and videos.· The bed covered in papers: old letters, plans, newspaper cuttings, legal reports, jotters.
· It is hard not to sympathise with those simple-minded viewers and tabloid newspaper editors who mistake the characters for the actors.· He is aided by the courageous local newspaper editor and a retired missionary woman.· And much of how this appears is the decision of the newspaper editors.· In fact, newspaper editors sometimes do not even exercise control over large sections of their newspapers.· Regional daily and weekly newspaper editor and reporters of those papers near to plant and offices.· They said Hegel had had to become a newspaper editor, a schoolmaster.· Everyone, even newspaper editors, were caught unawares by the Princess Diana phenomenon.· But newspaper editors say there's no way a fair privacy law could be made to work.
· In a subsequent newspaper interview she had voiced her hurt and anger that Abbado had not then even seen his child.· She spent most of Thursday doing television, radio and newspaper interviews.· But he is raising his public profile with newspaper interviews on issues such as black empowerment.· I had even brought with me to the stadium a copy of a newspaper interview Rich Scobee had given.
· Similarly the moral crusaders, newspaper proprietors and muck-raking journalists should be called off.· But for the newspaper proprietors, outside competition is not always a problem.· He has been in contact with Eddy Shah, the former national newspaper proprietor.· Last weekend it was offered to Eddy Shah, the former national newspaper proprietor, for £16m.· This may not have been very constructive, but, except towards the newspaper proprietors, it did not sound particularly bitter.· Meanwhile the opinions of newspaper proprietors played a disproportionate role in determining politicians' views of what the public wanted.· Eddy Shah, the former national newspaper proprietor, is one of his contacts.· The same goes for certain other immigrants, such as newspaper proprietors.
· Various newspaper reports commented on Meciar's changed stance on certain issues since the election.· They cite newspaper reports of police officers wearing gloves even during AIDS-related political demonstrations.· The material for the newspaper reports can be gathered in four main ways.· The newspaper report was based on an announcement to shareholders and the media by Navan Resources.· You've read those old newspaper reports of the hanging yourself, so how could Mallik be around still to terrorise you?· Recent newspaper reports have highlighted the potential threat to Britain when the Channel Tunnel links us with the Continent.· Write the newspaper report of the disaster.
· How much easier it would be if she were a newspaper reporter, like Tracey, she thought.· Don McCormack, a former newspaper reporter and editor, publishes relocation and general information guides about Northern California counties.· Best-selling thriller writer Ken Follett, a former newspaper reporter himself, put in £10,000.· The professional golfer is not like the newspaper reporter who wishes he were a novelist.· I had a special ticket, because I was a newspaper reporter.· They were restored a few hours later, after some local television and newspaper reporters got on to the story.· Unfortunately, the newspaper reporter did not press him on the point.· Drosnin is an investigative newspaper reporter who once wrote a best seller about Howard Hughes.
· Four out of five coupons now come through the Sunday newspaper.
VERB
· Full details were advertised in this newspaper over the past two weeks.· The number of jobs advertised in daily metropolitan newspapers in December fell 1. 8 percent.· They may be advertised in local newspapers or on local radio.· Newspaper and trade journals Another alternative is to advertise in newspapers and trade journals.· Brokers are listed in the Yellow Pages and also advertise in newspapers.· Abortifacient pills, usually ineffectual, were widely advertised in newspapers.· It will be delayed for at least three weeks to give time for the sites to be advertised in local newspapers.
· Throughout the summer adverts will appear in newspapers and magazines reminding people of the goodness of spam.· At her peak, it appeared in 900 newspapers and had an estimated 30 million readers.· Indignant letters appear in newspapers, angry questions are raised on the floor of Parliament, and occasionally fights out.· Her sketches are familiar to New Yorkers and have appeared on networks, newspapers and the wire services.· The story of the girl pilot first appeared in a small newspaper in California.· Much other statistical and record material also appears from time to time in major newspapers and economic commercial and industrial periodicals.
· One of them left a couple of minutes later to buy a newspaper.· Howard Baker and other political friends to buy the Knoxville Journal newspaper in 1980.· He bought Dawn a newspaper for the journey and carried her suitcase along the platform to the compartment.· He bought a couple of newspapers, then took a taxi with his luggage to the Hotel Palma.· Do something obvious first-buy some newspapers!· I left the house and bought newspapers and stopped on the sidewalk to read through the ads for vacant rooms.· On September 17 I bought three newspapers.· This expansion brings elements of Journal news coverage to an additional four million people who buy these newspapers.
· Advertisements should be placed in local newspapers and other public places seeking contact from nurses who are not in employment.· The government placed all nationalist newspapers under censorship.· Neild placed advertisements in the newspapers appealing for donations.· Bedford placed the newspaper on his lap.· Soldiers were placed on guard outside newspapers and broadcasting offices.
· The strip is now published in about 900 newspapers, including the Sunday Chronicle / Examiner.· The account that follows was to be published in his newspaper.· By then, he had decided to publish the newspaper USAfrica.· Shortly before the debate, a sensational attack on lesbian and gay Christians was published by a national newspaper.· The photo was published in the Independent newspaper.· In addition, the opposition will be allowed to publish a daily newspaper with a circulation of 500,000.· In one concession by the government on Dec. 28, it was given permission to publish its own newspaper, Rilindja Demokratika.
· Old Wang first learned the habit of reading newspapers closely during the Cultural Revolution and has several cuttings pinned on the wall.· Forty-five percent of adult citizens do not read newspapers.· It depicts the sad tale of a lavatory attendant, Jim, who reads newspapers to seek a new career.· There, she reads the newspaper, which hangs suspended from a rack by a bamboo rod.· I can read short newspaper stories or scientific articles or book chapters related to my professional work.· Once Hopkinson arrived late for breakfast to find the Colonel by himself reading a newspaper.· She was one of the women I tried to teach to read the newspaper.
· She told Mary Deare the newspapers had sold out.· A woman told a tabloid newspaper that she maintained a long-term affair with Clinton while he was governor of Arkansas.· They were shot or had their throats cut, Alija Lujinovoc told a New York newspaper.
· So disillusioned and grumpy is he that he writes a local newspaper column on the subject.· It was Cecil who wrote columns for community newspapers nominating Bombeck for president.· Nobody, after all, writes to the newspapers about the last cuckoo of spring.· He had written something for a newspaper in Kiev and worked on a magazine in Moscow.· I campaigned at a few women's conferences and tried to write letters to newspapers and place articles on the issue.· He is a prolific author and writes regularly for newspapers.· One of my favourite bits concerned the column she was commissioned to write for a newspaper during the general election.· His fans wrote angry letters to newspapers.
Phrases
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIEShave your nose in a book/magazine/newspaper
  • According to Hirsch and Gordon, the quality press focuses on those issues which interest and reflect its middle and upper class readership.
  • In the quality press, first, the 1960s saw a great growth of specialization within public affairs journalism.
  • Instant wisdom proffered by some commentators in the quality press is that Labour's task is forlorn.
  • Such calculations are normally done daily and are published in financial and other quality newspapers.
  • Support for the Alliance was weaker amongst readers of the tabloids than readers of the quality press: all perhaps as expected.
  • The quality newspapers treated the story in a few paragraphs.
  • The habit of reading the paper backwards even spread to the quality press.
  • The same is true of the mid-market press and the quality newspapers.
1newspaper (1) [countable] a set of large folded sheets of printed paper containing news, articles, pictures, advertisements etc which is sold daily or weekly SYN  paper:  She had read about it in the newspaper. a series of newspaper articles about life in CubaRegisterIn everyday English, people often say paper rather than newspaper:· I saw an ad in the paper.2[uncountable] sheets of paper from old newspapers:  Wrap the plates in newspaper to stop them from breaking. Bella laid the flowers out carefully on a sheet of newspaper.3[countable] a company that produces a newspaper:  He works for a local newspaper.GRAMMAR: Patterns with newspaperYou read something in a newspaper: · She saw an ad in the newspaper. Don’t say: on the newspaperYou often talk about the newspaper: · I read something about it in the newspaper. Don’t say: in newspaperCOLLOCATIONSverbsread a newspaper· Which newspaper do you read?get a newspaper (=buy one regularly)· We don’t get a newspaper; we tend to watch the news on TV.see/read something in the newspaper· I saw in the newspaper that he had died.appear in a newspaper· Her photo appeared in all the newspapers.a newspaper reports something (=has an article on something)· The newspapers reported that the police were treating the death as a suicide.ADJECTIVES/NOUN + newspapera national newspaper· The story was in all the national newspapers.a local newspaper· The store advertises in the local newspaper.a daily/weekly/Sunday newspaper (=one that is published every day/week/Sunday)· Do you get a daily newspaper?a tabloid newspaper (=a small-sized newspaper, especially one with not much serious news)· Their wedding made the headlines in all the tabloid newspapers.a quality newspaper British English (=a newspaper with a lot of serious news and good writing)· The story has not been given as much coverage in the quality newspapers.newspaper + NOUNa newspaper article/report/story· I read quite an interesting newspaper report on the war.a newspaper headline· ‘Wine is good for you’ announced a recent newspaper headline.a newspaper column (=a regular article in a newspaper written by a particular journalist)· She writes a regular newspaper column about gardening.a newspaper clipping/cutting (=a story cut out of a newspaper)· I found some old newspaper cuttings of the band's first concert in Liverpool.a newspaper reporter· She was fed up with being followed by newspaper reporters.a newspaper editor· Newspaper editors have a lot of power.a newspaper proprietor British English (=owner)· Ultimately, it’s the newspaper proprietor who decides what goes into the newspaper.THESAURUSnewspaper: · The New York Times is a popular daily newspaper.paper a newspaper. Paper is more common than newspaper in everyday English: · There was an interesting article in the local paper today.· the Sunday papersthe press newspapers and news magazines in general, and the people who write for them: · the freedom of the press· The press are always interested in stories about the royal family.the media newspapers, magazines, television, radio, and the Internet, considered as a group that provides news and information: · This issue has received a lot of attention in the media.· Her public image was shaped by the media.tabloid a newspaper that has small pages, a lot of photographs, short stories, and not much serious news: · The tabloids are full of stories about her and her boyfriend.broadsheet British English a serious newspaper printed on large sheets of paper, with news about politics, finance, and foreign affairs: · the quality broadsheetsthe nationals the newspapers that give news about the whole country where they are printed, in contrast to local newspapers: · The results of the nationwide survey became headlines in the nationals.the dailies the daily newspapers: · The dailies reported the story.parts of a newspaperarticle a piece of writing in a newspaper about a particular subject: · an article on the education reformsreport a piece of writing in a newspaper about an event: · newspaper reports on the warstory a report in a newspaper about an event, especially one that is not very serious or reliable: · You can’t always believe what you read in newspaper stories.a headline the title of an important newspaper article, printed in large letters above the article. The headlines are the titles of the most important stories on the front page: · The singer’s drug problem has been constantly in the headlines.front page the page on the front of a newspaper which has the most important news stories: · The story was all over the front page.section/pages the pages in a newspaper dealing with a particular area of news such as sports, business, or entertainment: · the financial pages of The Times· the arts sectioneditorial the page of a newspaper on which the editor of a newspaper and other people express their opinions about the news, rather than just giving facts: · an editorial on the vaccination programmecolumn an article on a particular subject or by a particular writer that appears regularly: · his weekly column on gardening
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