词汇 | broadsheet |
释义 | broadsheet noun[ C ] UKuk /ˈbrɔːd.ʃiːt/ us /ˈbrɑːd.ʃiːt/ a newspaper that is printed on large sheets of paper, or an advertisement printed on a large sheet of paper: 大幅报纸;大幅广告 In Britain, the broadsheets are generally believed to be more serious than the tabloids.在英国,人们通常认为大报比小报更严肃。 Newspapers & magazines above/below the foldidiom annal anti-press back copy brochure comic editorial fold full-page gazette glossy magazine house journal house organ organ quarterly rag reader sentinel serialize Sunday paper You can also find related words, phrases, and synonyms in the topics: Advertising and marketing Examples of broadsheetbroadsheet For the broadsheets the concern with representing the report's support for the police was similarly dominant. Data were taken from a single major genre of broadsheet newspaper prose. This vocabulary difference between broadsheets and tabloids is also shown by the verbs used in the verbs preceding the words 'to death'. The creation of revolutionary broadsheets was spurred by lower telegraph, post, and press rates, and proscription often led to wider circulation. They do not watch the news because they are in some way already primed or mobilized or motivated to do so, like broadsheet readers. On the one hand, the mobilizing effect of television news is weaker than that of the broadsheet. The surname is used 9 times in a broadsheet, only once in a tabloid. In the case of the print media there is a difference between broadsheet readers, on the one hand, and tabloid and non-readers, on the other. There is a significant difference between those who read a paper and those who do not, but this mostly reflects the contribution of broadsheet readers. The audiences of such propaganda were not the elites, and it therefore mainly took the form of illustrated broadsheets, rather than sophisticated pamphlets. The data for the present study were taken from a single major genre of broadsheet newspaper prose. Once again, the strong associations are with broadsheet newspapers, weaker ones with television news, and little of substantial significance shows up among tabloid readers. This underlines the strength of association of mobilization with broadsheet reading, and the lack of any difference between tabloid and irregular readers. Reading a broadsheet newspaper regularly is strongly associated with mobilization, while watching a lot of television has a weaker association of the same kind. The selection of newspapers was based on a mixture of political balance1 (the broadsheets) and the reputations of the three tabloids. 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. |
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