释义 |
Definition of tabloid in English: tabloidnoun ˈtablɔɪdˈtæbˌlɔɪd 1A newspaper having pages half the size of those of the average broadsheet, typically popular in style and dominated by sensational stories. 通俗小报 as modifier the tabloid press Example sentencesExamples - I suddenly thought what Scotland Yard would say, not to mention the tabloids.
- The frenzy that gets drummed up by some tabloids in an effort to merely sell papers is disgusting.
- No matter how nice they seem, you have to be sure that the story won't end up in the tabloids.
- She has even forgiven boyfriends who have sold stories about her to the tabloids.
- Truly there is nothing more snobbish than the tabloids when it comes to passing judgment on the way the other half lives.
- Im a student and know plenty of nice middle class types whose only source of news are tabloids.
- The gossip magazines and tabloids try their best to get something new.
- Unsettling as our own tabloids may be, the British psyche and its problems hardly matter to the wider world.
- The broadsheets and music press picked up on them first, with the tabloids following.
- News of one or another celebrity suing a tabloid always elicits praise from me.
- The alternative will be a messy scrap that would be in nobody's interests, except perhaps the tabloids.
- His good name has been smeared by the tabloids but his films still shine through with a unique and often brilliant vision.
- Traditionally, the news values of the tabloids have been subject to a great deal of criticism.
- But he should have resisted the intense pressure he has been under from the tabloids and Tories.
- The only reason she has not been is that her release has been in the hands of politicians, who have not dared take on the tabloids.
- The story and my picture were emblazoned on the front page of a tabloid.
- Even tabloids are hard to read when standing on the train, if it's crowded enough.
- England played Germany and that was the only contest that seemed to matter, if the tabloids were anything to go by.
- The tabloids often present a simplified, exaggerated, and personalized view of politics.
- It still caught me off guard when I saw my picture on an album cover or in the tabloids.
Synonyms newspaper, paper, broadsheet, journal, periodical, weekly, organ, news-sheet, newsletter, bulletin - 1.1North American as modifier Lurid and sensational.
〈主北美〉耸人听闻的,引起轰动的 耸人听闻的电视节目。 Example sentencesExamples - The rise of tabloid journalism, and then of Hollywood, intensified this trend.
- In short, the market is softening, but is in no way in a crisis, slump or any other such tabloid noun you care to use.
- Is it too much to expect, in this increasing tabloid media age, leadership from the media too?
- Tabloid journalism is a tricky subject: it tends to invite lofty condescension.
- The first obstacle to the rising star of my career in tabloid television was that we were lost.
- Throughout the article he used some of the most reactionary tabloid language possible for the occasion.
- The reason why dumbing down and tabloid trivialisation is so widespread is that it works.
- My interest in talking about Keira, however, is not to add to the stockpile of tabloid tittle-tattle.
- His tabloid chatter won over a new generation and their relationship blossomed.
- We ape the worst of tabloid titillation in a relentless downward drive of tacky exploitation.
- Britain's first blind prime minister would certainly have tabloid appeal.
- If this tabloid exposé is on the level, frankly we should all be chucking our jewellery crossly into the woods.
- Chattering about tabloid trivia or television celebrity shows, he can barely conceal his lack of interest.
- It is tabloid trash no matter how you dress it up or justify it to yourselves.
- In fact, most of us have the same low tabloid tastes as everyone else.
OriginLate 19th century: from tablet + -oid. Originally the proprietary name of a medicine sold in tablets, the term came to denote any small medicinal tablet; the current sense reflects the notion of ‘concentrated, easily assimilable’. Definition of tabloid in US English: tabloidnounˈtabˌloidˈtæbˌlɔɪd 1A newspaper having pages half the size of those of a standard newspaper, typically popular in style and dominated by headlines, photographs, and sensational stories. 通俗小报 Example sentencesExamples - His good name has been smeared by the tabloids but his films still shine through with a unique and often brilliant vision.
- The alternative will be a messy scrap that would be in nobody's interests, except perhaps the tabloids.
- It still caught me off guard when I saw my picture on an album cover or in the tabloids.
- No matter how nice they seem, you have to be sure that the story won't end up in the tabloids.
- Im a student and know plenty of nice middle class types whose only source of news are tabloids.
- The story and my picture were emblazoned on the front page of a tabloid.
- England played Germany and that was the only contest that seemed to matter, if the tabloids were anything to go by.
- The broadsheets and music press picked up on them first, with the tabloids following.
- But he should have resisted the intense pressure he has been under from the tabloids and Tories.
- She has even forgiven boyfriends who have sold stories about her to the tabloids.
- Traditionally, the news values of the tabloids have been subject to a great deal of criticism.
- The gossip magazines and tabloids try their best to get something new.
- News of one or another celebrity suing a tabloid always elicits praise from me.
- Unsettling as our own tabloids may be, the British psyche and its problems hardly matter to the wider world.
- The only reason she has not been is that her release has been in the hands of politicians, who have not dared take on the tabloids.
- Truly there is nothing more snobbish than the tabloids when it comes to passing judgment on the way the other half lives.
- The frenzy that gets drummed up by some tabloids in an effort to merely sell papers is disgusting.
- Even tabloids are hard to read when standing on the train, if it's crowded enough.
- The tabloids often present a simplified, exaggerated, and personalized view of politics.
- I suddenly thought what Scotland Yard would say, not to mention the tabloids.
Synonyms newspaper, paper, broadsheet, journal, periodical, weekly, organ, news-sheet, newsletter, bulletin - 1.1North American as modifier Sensational in a lurid or vulgar way.
they argued about who made what allegation on what tabloid TV show Example sentencesExamples - In short, the market is softening, but is in no way in a crisis, slump or any other such tabloid noun you care to use.
- His tabloid chatter won over a new generation and their relationship blossomed.
- Britain's first blind prime minister would certainly have tabloid appeal.
- Throughout the article he used some of the most reactionary tabloid language possible for the occasion.
- The rise of tabloid journalism, and then of Hollywood, intensified this trend.
- Is it too much to expect, in this increasing tabloid media age, leadership from the media too?
- Chattering about tabloid trivia or television celebrity shows, he can barely conceal his lack of interest.
- My interest in talking about Keira, however, is not to add to the stockpile of tabloid tittle-tattle.
- We ape the worst of tabloid titillation in a relentless downward drive of tacky exploitation.
- It is tabloid trash no matter how you dress it up or justify it to yourselves.
- In fact, most of us have the same low tabloid tastes as everyone else.
- Tabloid journalism is a tricky subject: it tends to invite lofty condescension.
- The first obstacle to the rising star of my career in tabloid television was that we were lost.
- The reason why dumbing down and tabloid trivialisation is so widespread is that it works.
- If this tabloid exposé is on the level, frankly we should all be chucking our jewellery crossly into the woods.
OriginLate 19th century: from tablet + -oid. Originally the proprietary name of a medicine sold in tablets, the term came to denote any small medicinal tablet; the current sense reflects the notion of ‘concentrated, easily assimilable’. |