释义 |
Definition of dateline in English: datelinenoun ˈdeɪtlʌɪnˈdeɪtlaɪn A line at the head of a dispatch or newspaper article showing the date and place of writing. Example sentencesExamples - Some journalists will put a dateline on a story even if the reporter never left the office.
- Make sure to include a name, news organization, and military unit or, if you're pointing us to an independent reporter, a recent dateline.
- This incident is not ripped from today's headlines, but from newspapers with a 1976 dateline.
- 1914 - Edouard Belin uses the fax machine to aid in news reporting, letting journalists fudge datelines for the first time.
- You know, from Doha, from Central Command, it was a convenient dateline to wrap the big picture but without all the different elements, it would have been absolutely hopeless.
- Blair falsified datelines and put his byline on the work of others.
- Is it OK to use a dateline if the reporter did an interview in that town, even if it wasn't the most important interview of the story?
- Thus each of my 17 chapters begins with a dateline, as if it were a journalistic dispatch.
- A close review of this article notes a future dateline of Feb. 13, 2005, with a later comment that the scenario is ‘undoubtedly just around the corner.’
- A dateline is dishonest if the reporter is sitting at home, using the telephone or email to close the distance with the source.
- Because of tragic political violence or combat, Northern Ireland, Nigeria and Yugoslavia also were common datelines for the ten newspapers, and a natural disaster put Papua New Guinea in the headlines.
- His journalistic coups and exotic datelines made his old colleagues proud.
- At least one editor said he uses datelines to tell readers where the news occurred, and he often puts datelines and bylines on stories in which the reporter remained back in the office and worked the phones.
- The byline is Bumiller's and the dateline is Clive, IA, which means she was physically in Clive at some point, but you'd never know it.
- Bylines and datelines state unequivocally that the reporter was there, saw what he saw, and reported it faithfully, unless an ‘additional reporting’ squib accompanies the story.
- Toe-touches were not acceptable under the newsroom policy on datelines, but they were widely sanctioned and often ordered by editors on the national desk.
- At least on stories beyond a newspaper's immediate coverage area, a dateline, in combination with a byline, means that the reporter gathered most of the information on the location.
- Among the items that had become opaque were datelines and bylines, which were sometimes close to a lie.
- Well, the ‘Times,’ just so our viewers know, has hired an ombudsman, has been much more stringent about the process of datelines so that people don't put datelines on places they visited for 12 and a half seconds.
- We decided to use datelines on staff-bylined stories only when the reporter has reported, in person, from that city or town.
verb ˈdeɪtlʌɪnˈdeɪtlaɪn [with object]Mark (a dispatch or article) with a dateline. Example sentencesExamples - There is an entry for each of 200 days of campaigning, usually several, datelined by town.
- There's a piece up on the New York Times website, datelined tomorrow, which discusses this story.
- One typical press account of the events, datelined Cape Canaveral, stated that ‘the project advanced space exploration and improved Cold War relations between the two countries.’
- All the stories are datelined in Moscow, and Duranty goes to some lengths to play down the crisis.
- In last Sunday's Daily Yomiuri appeared a Kyodo story datelined Washington, D.C., that puts the yarn into perspective.
- On April 13, 1975, a Schanberg story datelined from Phnom Penh was headlined: ‘Indochina without Americans: For Most, a Better Life.’
- The invitation from Kim was sent to the Kremlin early this month, Itar-Tass news agency said Wednesday in a report datelined Pyongyang.
- The first, datelined Charleston, reports on the proliferation of pork barrel federal projects named for Democratic Sen.
- So after a little digging, we traced this serious UNIX violation to a hacker outfit called ‘Caldera Inc. ‘The email was datelined 23 Jan 2002.’
- Did he miss Denis McQuail's letter of 29 November, noting that ‘out of the 29 pieces, 14 were datelined in the US, 11 in Europe and four elsewhere’?
- But the funny thing about the letter, dated 30 July, 1917 and datelined Zurich, is that Joyce seems to be just going through the motions on behalf of his brother.
- Well, there was a piece yesterday in the Los Angeles Times, which is datelined Rome.
- On February 28, 1998, an unsigned article, datelined Tallinn, appeared in The Economist.
- But what is most interesting to me is that the article is an Associated Press dispatch, datelined Beirut.
- The first article to appear, datelined July 22, was by Dusan Stojanovic of the Associated Press, filed from Kabul.
- Powers writes that a week later the teller read an Associated Press story datelined Havana in which Fidel Castro damned the CIA for its plots against Cuba and specifically mentioned funds that had come from Arthur Avignon.
- The Baltimore Sun, Boston Globe, Chicago Tribune, New York Times and Washington Post all ran long ‘take-out’ stories datelined from different West Bank settlements during that period; the Los Angeles Times ran two such stories.
- Several people have written in to observe that Frank Rich's column, printed on in the Sunday edition and datelined accordingly, normally goes online on the previous Thursday.
- I note that the article is datelined Fort Bragg; that should mean that Loven is actually there.
- This brings us nicely to the final part of this saga, but before we move on, one more thing: both stories were datelined San Francisco.
Definition of dateline in US English: datelinenounˈdātlīnˈdeɪtlaɪn A line at the head of a dispatch or special article in a newspaper showing the date and place of writing. Example sentencesExamples - Make sure to include a name, news organization, and military unit or, if you're pointing us to an independent reporter, a recent dateline.
- A close review of this article notes a future dateline of Feb. 13, 2005, with a later comment that the scenario is ‘undoubtedly just around the corner.’
- The byline is Bumiller's and the dateline is Clive, IA, which means she was physically in Clive at some point, but you'd never know it.
- At least on stories beyond a newspaper's immediate coverage area, a dateline, in combination with a byline, means that the reporter gathered most of the information on the location.
- 1914 - Edouard Belin uses the fax machine to aid in news reporting, letting journalists fudge datelines for the first time.
- Thus each of my 17 chapters begins with a dateline, as if it were a journalistic dispatch.
- This incident is not ripped from today's headlines, but from newspapers with a 1976 dateline.
- Bylines and datelines state unequivocally that the reporter was there, saw what he saw, and reported it faithfully, unless an ‘additional reporting’ squib accompanies the story.
- Is it OK to use a dateline if the reporter did an interview in that town, even if it wasn't the most important interview of the story?
- At least one editor said he uses datelines to tell readers where the news occurred, and he often puts datelines and bylines on stories in which the reporter remained back in the office and worked the phones.
- We decided to use datelines on staff-bylined stories only when the reporter has reported, in person, from that city or town.
- You know, from Doha, from Central Command, it was a convenient dateline to wrap the big picture but without all the different elements, it would have been absolutely hopeless.
- Among the items that had become opaque were datelines and bylines, which were sometimes close to a lie.
- Blair falsified datelines and put his byline on the work of others.
- A dateline is dishonest if the reporter is sitting at home, using the telephone or email to close the distance with the source.
- His journalistic coups and exotic datelines made his old colleagues proud.
- Because of tragic political violence or combat, Northern Ireland, Nigeria and Yugoslavia also were common datelines for the ten newspapers, and a natural disaster put Papua New Guinea in the headlines.
- Some journalists will put a dateline on a story even if the reporter never left the office.
- Well, the ‘Times,’ just so our viewers know, has hired an ombudsman, has been much more stringent about the process of datelines so that people don't put datelines on places they visited for 12 and a half seconds.
- Toe-touches were not acceptable under the newsroom policy on datelines, but they were widely sanctioned and often ordered by editors on the national desk.
verbˈdātlīnˈdeɪtlaɪn [with object]Mark (a dispatch or article) with a dateline. Example sentencesExamples - Well, there was a piece yesterday in the Los Angeles Times, which is datelined Rome.
- But what is most interesting to me is that the article is an Associated Press dispatch, datelined Beirut.
- Did he miss Denis McQuail's letter of 29 November, noting that ‘out of the 29 pieces, 14 were datelined in the US, 11 in Europe and four elsewhere’?
- The invitation from Kim was sent to the Kremlin early this month, Itar-Tass news agency said Wednesday in a report datelined Pyongyang.
- On April 13, 1975, a Schanberg story datelined from Phnom Penh was headlined: ‘Indochina without Americans: For Most, a Better Life.’
- Several people have written in to observe that Frank Rich's column, printed on in the Sunday edition and datelined accordingly, normally goes online on the previous Thursday.
- In last Sunday's Daily Yomiuri appeared a Kyodo story datelined Washington, D.C., that puts the yarn into perspective.
- Powers writes that a week later the teller read an Associated Press story datelined Havana in which Fidel Castro damned the CIA for its plots against Cuba and specifically mentioned funds that had come from Arthur Avignon.
- The Baltimore Sun, Boston Globe, Chicago Tribune, New York Times and Washington Post all ran long ‘take-out’ stories datelined from different West Bank settlements during that period; the Los Angeles Times ran two such stories.
- On February 28, 1998, an unsigned article, datelined Tallinn, appeared in The Economist.
- All the stories are datelined in Moscow, and Duranty goes to some lengths to play down the crisis.
- One typical press account of the events, datelined Cape Canaveral, stated that ‘the project advanced space exploration and improved Cold War relations between the two countries.’
- So after a little digging, we traced this serious UNIX violation to a hacker outfit called ‘Caldera Inc. ‘The email was datelined 23 Jan 2002.’
- But the funny thing about the letter, dated 30 July, 1917 and datelined Zurich, is that Joyce seems to be just going through the motions on behalf of his brother.
- There is an entry for each of 200 days of campaigning, usually several, datelined by town.
- There's a piece up on the New York Times website, datelined tomorrow, which discusses this story.
- This brings us nicely to the final part of this saga, but before we move on, one more thing: both stories were datelined San Francisco.
- I note that the article is datelined Fort Bragg; that should mean that Loven is actually there.
- The first article to appear, datelined July 22, was by Dusan Stojanovic of the Associated Press, filed from Kabul.
- The first, datelined Charleston, reports on the proliferation of pork barrel federal projects named for Democratic Sen.
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