词汇 | example_english_news-coverage |
释义 | news coveragecollocation in Englishmeanings of newsand coverageThese words are often used together. Click on the links below to explore the meanings. Or, see other collocations with coverage or news. news noun[U] uk /njuːz/ us /nuːz/ information or reports about ... See more at news coverage noun[U] uk /ˈkʌv.ər.ɪdʒ/ us /ˈkʌv.ɚ.ɪdʒ/ the reporting of a particular important event ... See more at coverage Examples of news coverageThese examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. Further, the newscoverage variable alone accounted for the majority of the explained variance. An area where coverage appears divorced from local (editorial) preferences is newscoverage of the presidential campaign. In fact, any error in measuring the favourability of newscoverage would have defeated the purpose, which was to estimate media effects. We find that newscoverage exercises an independent influence on levels of foreign aid to individual recipient countries, albeit at modest levels of significance. Soft newscoverage of politics is becoming mainstream. A race to the bottom in newscoverage is another way to model how competitor numbers can influence news content. First, despite several decades of research, few scholars have found large-scale effects of television newscoverage on voters' partisan preferences in general election campaigns. In the age of mass enfranchisement, this probably means campaigns must be able to access the mass media either directly (advertisements) or indirectly (newscoverage). The remainder of this article will thus concentrate on newscoverage and leaders, analysed respectively in the next two sections.%! The party in power receives substantially more, and more favourable, newscoverage and more opportunities to present its program in a favourable light. For example, are papers thought to be liberal more likely to label organizations 'right-wing' than to use the term 'left-wing' in their newscoverage? Mediatization of the political debate implies either politicians' increased responsiveness to media caprices or politicians' loss of monopoly over newscoverage. Finally, while soft newscoverage of politics includes substantially less policy content than hard news reporting, such programs nevertheless do impart substantive information to viewers. In addition, the practical/logical problems involved in such an expansion to include newscoverage are considerable and better suited to a snapshot methodology. A measure of public salience was collected for each issue by assessing the amount of newscoverage from a major paper in each sphere. For example, quality newscoverage may mobilize while sensationalist tabloid television may turn off the electorate. This table shows the extent to which respondents' following of election campaign newscoverage on television varies by their level of interest in politics generally. There was thus an important linkage between the tone of newscoverage to which respondents were exposed (on the one hand) and respondents' opinions (on the other). Because present-day newscoverage extends far and wide, it comes across many new terms and topics, making borrowing both necessary and possible, while also enhancing the flavor of a report. He finds that soft news accounts for an increasing proportion of stories in the media and that the emphasis on soft newscoverage contributes to declining interest in the news. These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. Want to learn more? Go to the definition of news Go to the definition of coverage See other collocations with coverage See other collocations with news |
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