单词 | op-ed |
释义 | op-edadj.n. Chiefly North American. A. adj. Situated on, relating to, or designating an op-ed page or article. ΘΚΠ society > communication > journalism > journal > parts and layout of journals > [adjective] op-ed1924 1924 R. H. Lyman World Almanac 25/1 This ‘op. ed. page’ (page opposite the editorial page) is unique in American newspapers. It is a page of opinion in all the arts. 1938 Sat. Evening Post 4 June 70 Swope developed the idea of a special sort of page opposite the editorial page—known among newspapermen as the ‘op ed page’. 1941 H. H. Broun Coll. Edition Heywood Broun p. ix Some of those who regarded the ‘op.ed.’ page of the old World, with its collection of wits, as part of breakfast may feel that his light pieces have been slighted. 1970 Time 10 Aug. 32 The Op-Ed page—so named because it runs opposite a newspaper's editorial page—became a journalistic tradition with the rise of the personal column. 1988 P. Monette Borrowed Time v. 125 I remember a brutal op-ed piece in the L.A. Times, written by a doctor..where he tried to make graphic just how desperate the disease was. 1991 S. Faludi Backlash i. ii. 12 Census Bureau statisticians wrote a response to Bennett and Bloom's op-ed article. 1999 S. Rushdie Ground beneath her Feet (2000) viii. 218 An op-ed columnist of the local edition of The Times of India went so far as to wonder if the country might literally be breaking apart. B. n. The page of a newspaper facing the editorial page, typically devoted to personal comment and feature articles. ΘΚΠ society > communication > journalism > journal > parts and layout of journals > [noun] > other sections or columns Poets' Corner1733 situations wanted1809 situations vacant1819 feuilleton1845 roman feuilleton1845 home page1860 personal1860 society page1883 City page1893 women's page1893 book page1898 ear1901 film guide1918 op-ed1931 masthead1934 magazine section1941 write-in1947 listings1971 1931 J. W. Barrett World, Flesh, & Messrs. Pulitzer iv. 82 Swope developed..the idea of a distinctive ‘opposite editorial page’ consisting of two ‘columnists’, one book reviewer and the daily output of the dramatic critic. We called this the ‘op-ed’ for short. 1970 Time 10 Aug. 32 Pioneered by the Pulitzers in the old New York morning World, the Op-Ed provides a variety of viewpoints in dozens of major metropolitan dailies. 1989 Jrnl. Commerce (Nexis) 3 Jan. 71 As usual we hold out a warm welcome to our readers for op-eds, letters and suggestions on these issues. 1992 New Republic 6 Apr. 3/2 How former President Richard Nixon turned a stale op-ed into a front-page New York Times story. 1997 N.Y. Times 5 Dec. a22/6 Paul R. Gross (Op-Ed, Dec. 1) properly laments the ‘thanks, but no thanks’ attitude of the California commission. 2000 D. Brooks Bobos in Paradise 155 The young intellectual at this stage of her career gets to write the scathing memos and op-eds castigating people four decades her senior for their ignorance and cowardice. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2004; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < adj.n.1924 |
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