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 headline ['hɛd`laɪn]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 大标题, 新闻摘要

vt. 为...做标题, 写标题


  1. A bold black headline screamed out from the front page.
    在(报纸的)头版上出现了一条令人触目惊心的粗黑体大字标题。
  2. A headline on the front page draws attention to the fuller story inside.
    扉页上的大字标题为的是吸引你注意里面的详细内容。
  3. A newspaper headline caught his attention.
    报纸的大标题引起他的注意.


headline
[ noun ]
  1. the heading or caption of a newspaper article

  2. <noun.communication>
[ verb ]
  1. publicize widely or highly, as if with a headline

  2. <verb.communication>
  3. provide (a newspaper page or a story) with a headline

  4. <verb.possession>


Headline \Head"line`\ (-l[imac]n`), n.
1. (Print.) The line at the head or top of a page.

2. (Naut.) See {Headrope}.

3. (Journalism) A title for an article in a newspaper,
sometimes one line, sometimes more, set in larger and
bolder type than the body of the article and indicating
the subject matter or content of the article.
[PJC]

4. A similar title at the top of the newspaper indicating the
most important story of the day; also, a title for an
illustration or picture.
[PJC]

headline \head"line`\ (-l[imac]n`), v. t.
1. To mention in a headline.
[PJC]

2. To furnish with a headline (senses 1, 3, or 4).
[PJC]

3. To publicise prominently in an advertisement.
[PJC]

  1. The Semiramis was widely regarded as Cairo's safest hotel - it is where US secretaries of state usually stay. In the meantime, the editors of the Egyptian Gazette can only rue yesterday morning's banner headline.
  2. Newsday, a New York newspaper, printed a story on Dec. 8 with the headline: "Canadian Plan: Care and Waiting for All."
  3. Pravda ran the censored letters under the banner headline "Letters From Florida" and undoubtedly expected big propaganda points as a result.
  4. The IIMR includes major restructuring costs in headline earnings, for example, even though such costs are unlikely to recur.
  5. 'The headline came out at 4:30 on a Friday afternoon in Europe on a day in which there had been very little trading so the market reacted dramatically.' In the morning the US currency had attempted to retrieve losses made earlier in the week.
  6. NatWest Securities is forecasting unchanged month-on-month inflation, and headline inflation of 2.9 per cent, with underlying inflation of 3.2 per cent.
  7. Appearing under the headline "Oprah!
  8. The headline of Ms. Kirkpatrick's piece, "Anita Hill's Victims," and her peroration, "And working women may well curse the name of Anita Hill in years to come," have brought the non-ethic of blaming the victim to a new low.
  9. However, since core measures of inflation may have slowed since April 1993, the headline rate may not jump by the same amount.
  10. "One Million From All Walks of Life Demonstrate in Support of Hunger-Striking Students," read the banner headline on the People's Daily, the official organ of the Communist Party.
  11. One publication stooped so low as to search for the most boring newspaper headline ever written and found: "Worthwhile Canadian Initiative," in the New York Times.
  12. A leaflet distributed in Michigan carries a bold-face headline: "Here is George Bush's distinguished record as 43rd vice president of the United States."
  13. To the breast-implant story, the press generally brought the stereotype captured in a USA Today headline: "Safety vs. Profits."
  14. The headline rate will be pushed down by lower mortgage rates and a sharp fall in petrol costs, but seasonal food prices usually rise in January and alcoholic drinks may cost more as Christmas offers end.
  15. And, my personal favorite: a release printed on copper with the headline, "Copper Tops on Increase After 2,000-Plus-Year Lull."
  16. Tuesday's headline in Corriere della Sera ran: 'Dollar jumps with Clinton.'
  17. That made me feel a bit like a citizen of Stalingrad crawling from the rubble some 50 winters ago, picking up a copy of Pravda and reading the headline: 'Red Army wins battle for city.'
  18. This, rather than headline spending cuts, should be the focus of the current review. Still, if the new chancellor decides to use his political clout to cut spending significantly, there may be an interest rate cut to soften the blow.
  19. Goldman Sachs projects a headline inflation rate of 4.7 per cent in June and one of as little as 3 per cent in October.
  20. This indicated that activity was stronger than suggested by the headline figure. Stocks held steady on the release of the data, with the bond market offering no guidance whatsoever.
  21. The Oakland Tribune printed a photo on its front page and a headline reading "So There?"
  22. "Soviet missile troops preparing withdrawal from (East Germany)," the Communist party's official newspaper New Germany said in a banner headline.
  23. 'Why are we Germans so unloved?' the popular Bild Zeitung deman-ded in a banner headline. One reason, it concluded, was precisely because Germans were so confused as well as so quarrelsome.
  24. Due to an error a table which appeared in the Financial Times of October 24/25 under the headline 'Flying into a storm of competitor protest' was entitled: Gatwick Market Shares in 1991.
  25. The opening of the Berlin Wall rated a single column on page one, beside a huge headline on a local labor dispute.
  26. The most frequently cited headline figures, based on overall gross domestic product, flatter what has occurred.
  27. Important stories throughout the paper are to carry small, one-sentence descriptions set in moderately large type immediately below the headline, an unusual feature.
  28. To avoid confusion with Jordan's king on The Wall Street Journal news pages, reporters, editors and headline writers have been instructed to use "Iraq's Hussein" or "Saddam Hussein."
  29. "This account of the Profumo affair is the most accomplished British commercial film in a long time _ fluent, engrossing, racing along the story capsuled long ago in that headline "The Minister, The Model and The Russian Spy,"' the Daily Mail said.
  30. The market consensus is for a headline rate of 2.6 per cent and an ex-mortgage rate of 3 per cent. Traders also are awaiting today's announcement by the Bank of England of the terms of the latest gilt auction.
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