Sentencedict.com
 Directly to word page Vague search(google)
Home > Tabloid in a sentence

Tabloid in a sentence

  up(1)  down(0)
Sentence count:123+6Posted:2017-03-06Updated:2020-07-24
Synonym: ragsheettabyellow journalismSimilar words: exploitableavoidabletablestablenotablemutabletableaueatableMeaning: ['tæblɔɪd]  n. 1. sensationalist journalism 2. newspaper with half-size pages. 
Random good picture Not show
91. Arriving in Britain in the 1960s, he invented the modern tabloid newspaper—a stew of sexual titillation, moral outrage and political aggression.
92. Nor is the News of the World just any tabloid.
93. The Global Times, a tabloid owned by the Communist Party's People's Daily newspaper, hit hard upon the theme of besiegement.
94. In fact, according to extracts from a book published in a UK tabloid, Tatum told a friend: 'How can any girl have a relationship with him?
95. Tabloid headlines are puns where words can have more than one meaning.
96. Britain's House of Windsor also clearly illustrates the fall of monarchy from Pomp and Circumstance to tabloid hell.
97. Tabloid: Newspaper that about half the size of a regular newspaper. Approximating to A 3.
98. the rabid tabloid press.
99. For a broadsheet, the Telegraph seems to run an awful lot of tabloid celebrity articles.
100. As the tabloid have hit on hard times, the cheque of chequebook journalism have shrink.
101. For the next year, the actress' travails seemed to play out on a split screen, with tabloid stories mirroring Aniston's movie titles.
102. Sadly, a few tabloid newspapers got hold of this under - the - table gossip.
103. The recent tabloid sting involving the Duchess of York has elicited plenty of schadenfreude in the British press.
104. Her reading consisted of the Daily News, a tabloid; instead of bookshelves, our living room featured a piano,[www.Sentencedict.com] a baby grand.
105. His name features frequently in the social columns of the tabloid newspapers.
106. Many, many collectibles, pulled straight from the books, are piled high in the gift shops of Hogsmeade. Ever wanted to read the wizarding tabloid The Quibbler while wearing a pair of Spectrespecs?
107. The liberal tabloid "LA Weekly", which depicted George W. Bush, the former president, as Dracula on its cover in 2004, denounced the Obama-Joker poster as virulently racist.
108. American TV tabloid news programs like Hard Copy use sensationalism to attract viewers.
109. Geena Davis plays the vampiress Odette in this campy movie about a pair of tabloid reporters who travel to Transylvania in search of Frankenstein.
110. A tabloid lonely hearts columnist who answers questions from readers.
111. Thanks largely to some splendid muckraking by the Guardian, it is now clear how one tabloid obtained some of its headlines.
112. A few tabloid newspapers got hold of this under-the-table gossip.
113. The media has joined the debate with disapproving noises about "yob culture, " though Dr. Gill argues that they may be part of the problem, given the tabloid tendency to champion the vulgar.
114. Britain's large tabloid presence represents a hangover from the old class system: a wide suspicion of intellectualism and an unhealthy disregard for serious news, informed debate or educated opinion.
115. In fact (Sentencedict.com), the paper has cut its size in half from a broadsheet to tabloid.
116. Hoare was one of the few sources who allowed his name to be used when speaking to the Times last year for an investigative report about allegations of phone-hacking by the British tabloid.
117. At a time when the network newsmagazines are close to being overrun by tabloid sensationalism.
118. But as the first grieving fades, and all those people Jackson's lawyers paid to keep quiet get other people to pay for their stories, the tabloid tattling will return.
119. The puppet is quick-witted and charming but also consistently menacing — which reminds us, of course, of Gibson the very bad boyfriend and tabloid star.
120. Also to be seen for the first time is an outtake from an episode of Andy Warhol's T.V in which artist Keith Haring discusses his own use of tabloid headlines in his first street art interventions.
More similar words: exploitableavoidabletablestablenotablemutabletableaueatablevegetableportablesuitableadaptableveritableon the tablerefutabledebatabletimetableirritablepalatablecomfortableequitableimmutableestablishdelectabletable tennisprofitablehospitablecreditableunbeatableinimitable
Total 123, 30 Per page  4/5  «first  pre  next  last»  goto
Leave a comment
Welcome to leave a comment about this page!
Your name:
Latest commentsInto the comment page>>
More words