English, asked by mansiqueen143, 9 months ago

10 examples of all types of articles​

Answers

Answered by kavitharajusri
0

Answer:

HDD and it is correct but I don't want to do everything in my life and I have a few days to the store to get some sleep and it is not a good time for the interview and I will play with me and my wife are the one who is the client and the family are well and that you are the one who is correct and the family are well and I will play with me and my wife would like a refund please I have been trying for a few hours and I will be there for the interview on the one I was looking for a few days and I will be there for the interview

Explanation:

hope hope it is correct

Answered by aniketpanwar0631
0

Broadsheet

A large format newspaper, as opposed to a tabloid (q.v.), in contrast to which it is sometimes deemed more respectable and serious. Originally broadsheets were large, unfolded newspapers printed on a single side, though ballads and other kinds of printed material were also issued this way. Sometimes called broadside. Example of a broadsheet:

 

Bureau County Tribune

 

Read more about broadsheets in Key Concepts in Journalism Studies.

Byline

Part of an article that identifies the author. For a discussion of signature versus anonymity in newspapers, see Salmon, pp.65-74.

Caption

Descriptive text beneath a photograph, illustration, or other graphical material. Sometimes called a cutline.

Caption Title

Publication title given atop the first full page of text. More typical of magazines.

Dateline

Part of a news article that identifies the date-when and location-from-which the story was filed.

Edition

Newspapers are sometimes published in different editions. An edition can be distinguished by the time of day it is issued (e.g. morning edition, afternoon edition, evening edition, final edition), by the special nature of its content (e.g. extra edition, inauguration edition), or by the location of its intended audience (e.g. metro edition, suburban edition, state edition). Variant editions can pose problems to the researcher trying to track down a specific citation. Digitized newspaper collections often include only one edition. Microfilmed collections are more likely to include multiple editions.

Editorial Page

Portion of the newspaper that publishes opinion (including editorials, op-ed pieces, syndicated columns, readers' letters, and cartoons), as opposed to the news pages, which are supposed to contain objective, fact-based reporting. Editorials, also called leaders, are usually unsigned articles that reflect the opinion of the newspaper's editorial board. Op-ed pieces, on the other hand, are signed opinion pieces. The editorial page is sometimes labeled as such, but more often is recognizable by the content it carries. The masthead (q.v.) is often printed on the editorial page. Sometimes called the op-ed page, though some consider the op-ed page to be completely separate ("op ed" is an abbreviation for "opposite the editorial page").

Features

Newspaper articles that are not strictly news or opinion. Examples are profiles of important people, cooking tips, consumer advice, career strategies, or health information.

Headline

Informally, the title of an article. Technically the headline is a line of display type that is set above the article, and that summarizes that article, or otherwise attempts to capture a reader's attention. Headlines are sometimes divided into different decks. Decks are different levels of a headline, distinguished by the size of display type used. A second deck is something like a subtitle in a journal article.

Investigative Journalism

Also known as stunt journalism. A key development in British Victorian-era reporting, it took the form of exposés or investigations into various social institutions. One of the most famous late 19th-century examples was William T. Stead's controversial series on child prostitution for the Pall Mall Gazette (1885). Read more about investigative journalism in Key Concepts in Journalism Studies.

Leader

A type of editorial article that occupies a fixed position in the newspaper, generally with the masthead (q.v.). These articles are meant to convey the paper's viewpoint and political allegiances, and also to shape the reader's opinion on an issue or event. Leaders were written both by editorial boards and prominent journalists.  

Masthead

Publication information including ownership, publisher, editors, office address, frequency of publication, subscription rates, and more. Location varies, but is often found on the back of page 1, near the editorial page, or on the table of contents page in magazines. The term masthead is sometimes used to denote the cover title, or nameplate (q.v.).

Nameplate

Newspaper's title and logo, printed on the front page. Sometimes called masthead, flag, title-line, or titlepiece.

Pull Quote

A brief excerpt from an article, set in display type, usually beside a column of text, for the purpose of drawing the reader's attention to some interesting aspect of the article. Pull quotes are more typically found in magazines, but became increasingly common in late twentieth century newspapers design.

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