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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
headline
I.noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a newspaper headline
▪ ‘Wine is good for you’ announced a recent newspaper headline.
banner headline
▪ The front-page banner headline read ‘Disgraced police chief to stand trial’.
grabbed the headlines (=was the most important story in the newspapers)
▪ The plight of the refugees immediately grabbed the headlines.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
banner
▪ It was given a banner headline on page one and was continued on two inner pages.
▪ In banner headlines, the Cataract Journal announced that he had saved the carnival.
▪ Success is celebrated in banner headlines.
▪ The story also earned a front-page banner headline in the national newspaper, the Globe and Mail.
news
▪ This is no one-day wonder, as most news headlines are.
▪ But elements of that crisis are already recurrent news headlines.
newspaper
▪ Even in his retirement he has continued to make newspaper headlines.
▪ When David first caught sight of the newspaper headline on the board outside he shook himself with wonder.
▪ After national newspaper headlines about racism in the town, Telford has begun to consider whether there is an undercurrent of prejudice.
▪ She noticed the newspaper headlines and was vaguely aware of advertisements.
■ VERB
capture
▪ Teenager Lee Ellison captured the headlines, and attracted League scouts to Feethams, with his goal scoring earlier in the season.
▪ Although Patriots capture headlines and boast of a massive underground movement, they are so amorphous that counting them is guesswork.
▪ But now that confronting Enron has captured the necessary headlines, the deal is quietly being put back together again.
dominate
▪ Industrial action and pay disputes dominated the headlines in the 1970s.
▪ As the news of layoffs and plant closings came to dominate the headlines and the airwaves, consumer spending dropped off sharply.
▪ When did climate change last dominate the headlines?
▪ Mr Murdoch had been dominating the headlines again.
grab
▪ What has grabbed headlines this year is the issue of food safety.
▪ Mr Pincher, though, is only the ghost writer and it's Dido who's grabbing the headlines.
▪ That was the rift that grabbed headlines late in 1990, as a result of a dire forecast.
▪ When it came to grabbing the headlines, it was regularly the opposition that stole the show.
▪ Yet another key factor was that some companies saw Hare as a way to grab headlines for themselves and their products.
▪ He doesn't need other players becoming second class news because their colleague is grabbing all the headlines for the wrong reasons.
▪ The university says the report is just an attempt to grab headlines.
hit
▪ Not long afterwards the Dams Raid took place, and this did hit the headlines and captured the imagination of the public.
▪ The village hit the headlines, however, in a tragic way when an accident and fire happened on 13 October 1928.
▪ Only a life-or-death issue such as a liver or heart will hit the headlines.
▪ Pundits' predictions of repossessions topping 80,000 during 1991 hit the headlines.
▪ A former priest, he hit the headlines as secretary and then chairman of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.
▪ Institutions that hit the headlines with accounts paying top-flight rates might also have a few skeletons in the cupboard.
▪ This week, Ali G lookalike Gavin Burtenshaw hit the headlines for reasons too dull to mention.
▪ Ride a big winner, hit the headlines - that's racing.
make
▪ Even in his retirement he has continued to make newspaper headlines.
▪ The media buy into the scam because such scare stories about unseen threats make good headlines.
▪ Days later his passionate affair with cartoonist Sally Anne Lassoon was making headlines.
▪ More airplane tragedies will make the headlines.
▪ We even occasionally make the headlines - one year the senior team beat Millfield Junior, for example.
▪ But why should he alone make the headlines?
▪ The story made headlines around the nation for weeks.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
capture the headlines
▪ Teenager Lee Ellison captured the headlines, and attracted League scouts to Feethams, with his goal scoring earlier in the season.
hit the headlines
▪ Institutions that hit the headlines with accounts paying top-flight rates might also have a few skeletons in the cupboard.
▪ It's the E.coli 0157 strain that often hits the headlines.
▪ Not long afterwards the Dams Raid took place, and this did hit the headlines and captured the imagination of the public.
▪ Only a life-or-death issue such as a liver or heart will hit the headlines.
▪ Pundits' predictions of repossessions topping 80,000 during 1991 hit the headlines.
▪ The village hit the headlines, however, in a tragic way when an accident and fire happened on 13 October 1928.
▪ Their problems all hit the headlines.
▪ They hit the headlines last year when Richard left his first wife, Caroline, a housemaid with Princess Diana.
make the papers/headlines/front page etc
▪ And the story made the front pages.
▪ Not surprisingly, the story made the front page of the New York Times and many other papers.
▪ Print reporters know their stories stand a better chance of making the front page.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ A supermarket tabloid newspaper had the headline "Space Aliens Meet with the President."
▪ I just saw the headline. I didn't have time to read the article.
▪ The headline read: "Pope to Visit Kazakhstan."
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Changes in the alcohol section stole the headlines.
▪ Charlotte could almost suspect the headline had already been selected, the outcome already determined.
▪ First, and best known, is GoScript while more recently Freedom of the Press has also been making a few headlines.
▪ In recent weeks and months, the headlines have painted a picture of an industry in crisis.
▪ Mr Murdoch had been dominating the headlines again.
▪ The Grandstand presenter-turned-guru was hardly out of the headlines two years ago.
▪ The killer will be caught, photographed in handcuffs, mentioned in headlines for months, maybe years.
▪ The problems-from bad backs to carpal tunnel syndrome to headaches-have made the headlines of every health magazine in the country.
II.verb
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Frank Sinatra headlined at the Sands Hotel for three consecutive seasons.
▪ The report was headlined "Big Changes at City Hall."
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ The ordinary reader is impressed by the tone and manner of publication, and the words chosen to headline a story.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
headline

headline \head"line`\ (-l[imac]n`), v. t.

  1. To mention in a headline.

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

  3. To publicise prominently in an advertisement.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
headline

1670s, from head (n.) in sense "heading of a book or chapter" (c.1200) + line (n.). Originally a printers' term for the line at the top of a page containing the title and page number; used of newspapers from 1890, and transferred unthinkingly to broadcast media. Headlinese "language peculiar to headlines" is from 1927. Headlines "important news" is from 1908.

Wiktionary
headline

n. A heading or title of an article. vb. (context entertainment English) To have top billing; to be the main attraction

WordNet
headline

n. the heading or caption of a newspaper article [syn: newspaper headline]

headline
  1. v. publicize widely or highly, as if with a headline

  2. provide (a newspaper page or a story) with a headline

Wikipedia
Headline

The headline is the text indicating the nature of the article below it.

The large type front page headline did not come into use until the late 19th century when increased competition between newspapers led to the use of attention-getting headlines.

It is sometimes termed a news hed, a deliberate misspelling that dates from production flow during hot type days, to notify the composing room that a written note from an editor concerned a headline and should not be set in type.

Headlines in English often use a set of grammatical rules known as headlinese, designed to meet stringent space requirements by, for example, leaving out forms of the verb "to be" and choosing short verbs like "eye" over longer synonyms like "consider".

Headline (film)

Headline is a 1944 British thriller film directed by John Harlow and starring David Farrar, Anne Crawford, William Hartnell and John Stuart. It was based on the novel The Reporter by Ken Attiwall. Its plot involves a crime reporter who searches for a mystery woman who has witnessed a murder.

Usage examples of "headline".

Pitching your tent An example of continuity between the headline and the body copy is an advertisement for a line of tents sold by the Boy Scouts of America.

The striking photograph and quick, playful headline created instant identification with the advertiser and represented the kind of products that could be found at the store.

While the headlines and visuals change, the overall impression is the same, so that ultimately the customer recognizes the advertiser without looking at the logo.

And continuity of message is also a vital piece of the advertising pie-from headline to body copy.

Abu Ghraib prison commanded headlines in spring 2004, Iraqi blogger Ali posted the reflections of a physician friend who had treated inmates at the notorious jail.

It did not strike her that the name of Ross Bland should have appeared upon the front page in big headlines, while that of Dana Brye could be included among those of persons who had gone somewhere, without naming the exact destination.

Once, the British magazine Picture Post, now defunct, had run a photograph of Capa, and the headline above the caption had read, The Greatest War Photographer in the World.

The sensational murder trial of Elroy Doil prompted headlines in almost every newspaper in the country and was featured daily on network TV.

In an important econometric study, American Enterprise Institute researchers Kevin Hassett and John Lott methodically surveyed headlines in hundreds of newspapers and AP reports on unemployment, GDP, retail sales, and durable-goods orders going back to 1985, and found them to be considerably gloomier overall when a Republican sat in the White House, regardless of the economic data the stories reported.

Spider-Man, Peter had seen the escapes of Electro, Mysterio, and Doctor Octopus hit the moving headlines on the news building in Times Square.

SEx Doc INNOCENT, the Inquirer headline screamed in a double-edged exoneration the morning after the suit was dismissed.

As soon as news of the acquittal came to us we rushed from our classes, drove in a horn-honking procession from school to Tug Hill Park, cars crammed with screaming kids--HEART ACQUITTAL CELEBRATED IN WILLVILLE, the Buffalo Evening News headline would read, above photo of Smoke Filer driving his T-Bird, our arms stuck out every like tentacles, fingers flashing the V-for-Victory sign.

The kind hick tourists bought, with jazzy headlines like HARRY SMITH HITS HOLLYWOOD, GIRLS TAKE TO THE HILLS!

Raf was still writing headlines in his head when Kamila walked over to another trolley and pulled back the sheet, exposing the face and shoulders of a blonde teenager.

As Fortune magazine headlined a feature article a year after the new drug swept, like a tornado, upon the pharmaceutical scene: 409 FELDING-ROTH FINDS RICH IS BETTER Fortune estimated that the first year of Peptide 7 sales would bring in revenues of six hundred million dollars.