释义 |
View usage for: (hedlaɪn) Word forms: plural, 3rd person singular presenttense headlines, present participle headlining, past tense, past participle headlined1. countable nounA headline is the title of a newspaper story, printed in large letters at the top of the story, especially on the front page. The Daily Mail has the headline 'The Voice of Conscience'. Synonyms: heading, title, caption, headline banner More Synonyms of headline 2. plural nounThe headlines are the main points of the news which are read on radio or television. I'm Claudia Polley with the news headlines. 3. verb [usually passive]If a newspaper or magazine article is headlined a particular thing, that is the headline that introduces it. The article was headlined 'Tell us the truth'. [be V-ed quote] [Also V n quote] 4. verbIf someone headlines a show, they are the main performer in it. The band are headlining the festival's Saturday programme. [VERB noun] 5. See to hit the headlines headline in British English (ˈhɛdˌlaɪn) noun1. Also called: head, headinga. a phrase at the top of a newspaper or magazine article indicating the subject of the article, usually in larger and heavier type b. a line at the top of a page indicating the title, page number, etc 2. (modifier) denoting an important piece of news headline news 3. (modifier) denoting the main performer at a concert or music festival the headline act at Glastonbury 4. (usually plural) the main points of a television or radio news broadcast, read out before the full broadcast and summarized at the end 5. hit the headlines verb6. (transitive) to furnish (a story or page) with a headline 7. to have top billing (in) headline in American English (ˈhɛdˌlaɪn) noun1. a line at the top of a page in a book, giving the running title, page number, etc. 2. US a line or lines, usually in larger type, at the top of a newspaper article, givinga short statement of its contents 3. an important item of news verb transitiveWord forms: ˈheadˌlined or ˈheadˌlining US4. to provide (a news article) with a headline 5. to give (a performer or performance) featured billing or publicity 6. to be the leading performer attraction in (a variety show, popular music concert, etc.) COBUILD Collocationsheadline garner headlines lurid headline negative headline read the headlines tabloid headlines Examples of 'headline' in a sentenceheadline Remember the family spat that hit the headlines a couple of years ago?This time the story made national headlines.Yet the headline figures mask systemic failure and a stubborn reluctance to confront its more obvious causes.What a choice of headlines to read as he dips fried dough sticks in his soy milk.What a good headline on your front page.This is like just giving the headlines on the news at the beginning of the programme.The film has grabbed headlines for people being carried out during screenings.The story made headlines around the world.The headline figures on the gender pay gap are reasonably encouraging.The problem is that more sensational weather forecasts make much better news headlines.She rushed into this to grab headlines and cash.The headline figures in the accounts are not pretty and neither is the detail.For anyone in business, the headlines make grim reading.It is the 30,000 levy that has hit the headlines.Each features a fab front page headline from our first 40 years.Its headline read 'How much bad luck fits into a single football match?I try to rustle up the main headlines from the domestic front line.A gift from father to son also hit the headlines.As recent cases that have hit the headlines show, our investigators work tirelessly to bring them to justice.The stunt made headlines on the main TV news programmes.He was due to headline the Birmingham show tonight and London tomorrow.I like the snappy nature of the front page headlines, it's wicked. In other languagesheadline British English: headline / ˈhɛdˌlaɪn/ NOUN A headline is the title of a newspaper story, printed in large letters at the top of it. The headline says `New government plans'. - American English: headline
- Arabic: عُنْوَانٌ رَئِيسِيّ
- Brazilian Portuguese: manchete
- Chinese: 大字标题
- Croatian: naslov
- Czech: titulek novin
- Danish: overskrift
- Dutch: krantenkop
- European Spanish: titular
- Finnish: otsikko
- French: titre
- German: Schlagzeile
- Greek: τίτλος εφημερίδας
- Italian: titolo
- Japanese: 見出し
- Korean: 큰 표제
- Norwegian: overskrift
- Polish: nagłówek
- European Portuguese: cabeçalho
- Romanian: titlu
- Russian: заголовок
- Latin American Spanish: titular
- Swedish: rubrik
- Thai: หัวข่าว
- Turkish: başlık haber
- Ukrainian: заголовок
- Vietnamese: tiêu đề
British English: headline VERB If a newspaper or magazine article is headlined a particular thing, that is the headline that introduces it. The article was headlined 'Tell us the truth'. - American English: headline
- Brazilian Portuguese: receber um título
- Chinese: 为…加标题
- European Spanish: titular
- French: intituler
- German: als Überschrift haben
- Italian: intitolare
- Japanese: 見出しをつける
- Korean: 표제가 붙다
- European Portuguese: receber um título
- Latin American Spanish: titular
All related terms of 'headline'Chinese translation of 'headline' n (c) -
标(標)题(題) (biāotí) (个(個), gè) the headlines (Publishing) 头(頭)条(條)新闻(聞) (tóutiáo xīnwén) (TV, Rad) 内(內)容提要 (nèiróng tíyào) to hit the headlines 成为(為)头(頭)条(條)新闻(聞) (chéngwéi tóutiáo xīnwén) it was headline news 是头(頭)条(條)新闻(聞) (shì tóutiáo xīnwén)
Definition a phrase in heavy large type at the top of a newspaper or magazine article indicating the subject I'm sick of reading headlines about financial scandals. Additional synonymsDefinition a descriptive name or heading of a section of a book, speech, etc. The book was first published under the title `A Place for Us'. Synonyms heading, name, caption, label, legend, inscription |