Concept cluster: Graphics and sound > Newspaper sections or features
n
article
n
A writer of advertising copy.
n
The industry or profession made up of such communications.
n
a business enterprise dedicated to creating, planning and handling advertising on behalf of its client companies.
n
A newspaper feature in which questions (typically from anonymous readers who seek advice) are answered by an advice columnist (or agony aunt).
n
(chiefly UK) A column of a newspaper which contains advertisements relating to lost relatives and friends and other personal matters.
n
A piece of nonfictional writing such as a story, report, opinion piece, or entry in a newspaper, magazine, journal, dictionary, encyclopedia, etc.
n
(film, television) A person employed to check the accuracy and realism of a script.
n
A short description of a book, film, or other work, written and used for promotional purposes.
n
A person who who represents an author to prospective publishers
n
Work done with the aid of textbooks.
n
A short news story or report.
n
A short printed publication, especially one produced by an organization.
n
A memorial of a body; a report of legislative proceedings, etc.
n
A collection of original documents bound in one volume.
n
A type of catalogue with a magazine-like style.
n
A section of a newspaper, magazine or web site containing classified advertisements.
n
A co-writer of a script, a joint scriptwriter.
n
(by extension) A recurring feature in a periodical, especially an opinion piece, especially by a single author or small rotating group of authors, or on a single theme.
n
A person who identifies books for a publisher to publish, and acts as a link to authors
n
a writer of advertising copy.
n
(marketing, advertising) A person who writes advertising copy (the text used in advertisements).
n
A joint scenarist; a screenwriter working with another on the same project.
n
Someone who cooperates with one or more other people in screenwriting
v
To write (a script) together with someone
n
Any material substance on which the information is represented by writing.
n
Documentary evidence and sources.
n
(figuratively) A record of any other Norman survey.
adj
(art) Having undergone editioning
n
An editor who inspects, and culls from, periodicals, or exchanges, for his or her own publication.
n
A document made up of facts on a particular topic.
n
A section of a European newspaper typically dedicated to arts, culture, criticism, and light literature.
n
A short article in a newspaper or magazine.
n
{{quote-journal
adj
So important as to warrant being put on the front page of newspapers.
n
A professional writer who is paid to write material that is officially credited to another person; one who writes on behalf of someone else, often for a celebrity.
n
(journalism, slang) A paragraph.
n
Alternative form of guideword [A watchword; a word or phrase that serves as one's guide.]
n
A worksheet, leaflet, or pamphlet that is given out (usually by hand) for a certain use.
n
A bold, broad, and subjective moral generalization on a situation, with little or no original analysis or insight, especially by a journalist.
n
(historical) A newspaper featuring illustrations.
n
A statement of the ownership and authorship of a document, which must be included in books, newspapers, magazines and websites published in Germany and certain other German-speaking countries.
n
The use of information as a weapon.
n
One who gathers, analyzes, interprets and uses information, possibly as a career.
n
A short article in a newspaper.
n
A short editorial, or a paragraph in an editorial.
v
To do a voice-over translation of a film.
n
Section of a periodical in which readers' letters are published.
n
(fandom slang) Section of a periodical in which readers' letters are published.
n
(informal) An article based around a list.
n
A person who represents writers and their written works to publishers and film producers and assists in the sale and deal negotiation of the same.
n
(fine arts) A copy from a master (a copy of a masterpiece), done for reasons including training, enjoyment, homage, pastiche, or otherwise.
n
An unpublished academic paper.
n
A work, such as an article or television broadcast, in multiple parts published sequentially.
n
A book, article, etc. that one is strongly recommended to read.
n
A sheet of news; a handbill bearing news.
n
The characteristic of being newsworthy.
n
(journalism, colloquial) The sentence or paragraph that summarizes a story.
n
A periodical publication that has been authorised to publish public or legal notices.
n
A newspaper page containing signed articles by commentators expressing viewpoints that may not agree with those espoused by the editorial board, traditionally printed opposite the editorial page.
n
An official magazine, newsletter, or similar publication of an organization.
n
A written publication released as a series of pre-planned magazine-like issues over a period of time, distributed through the same channels as magazines.
n
A regularly issued thematic publication that contains the most current information in its field, often the primary means for communication of original scholarship or creative work at the cutting edge of research in its field.
n
Part of a newspaper or magazine in which people can have personal messages published.
n
A newspaper or magazine with many pictures, or section thereof.
n
(jargon, scholarly publishing) published journal article, also known as publisher's version, version of record or VoR: the version of a paper as printed or digitally published in a journal by its publisher
n
One who creates and/or delivers a presentation using PowerPoint or a similar Web-based slideshow product.
n
Such a section in a more general publication, such as a newspaper.
n
One who publishes, especially books.
n
A book containing questions and answers on some topic, intended to test the reader's knowledge or to form the basis of a quiz.
n
(journalism) A blurb on the front page of a newspaper issue or section that refers the reader to the full story inside the issue or section by listing its slug or headline and its page number.
n
Information supplied in a report.
n
A periodical which makes a survey of the arts or some other field.
n
The summary to a news bulletin.
n
(authorship) A scriptwriter.
n
A separate copy of a paper originally published in an academic journal.
n
A publication issued in successive parts, often numbered and with no predetermined end.
n
A short, simple advertisement in a newspaper or magazine, usually collected in a section.
n
An original document or record that provides proof of activity that is summarized elsewhere (e.g. case notes, medical chart, diary entry, minutes of a meeting, etc.).
n
A sales catalogue aimed at a particular demographic.
n
(printing, historical) A subeditor having a similar role to that of the stone editor.
n
A script editor
n
An additional section of a newspaper devoted to a specific subject.
n
A list of the ten most popular items of a given category, especially popular songs
n
(journalism) The main topic of current interest.
n
A self-paced learning exercise; a lesson prepared so that a student can learn at their own speed, at their convenience.
n
A reader who interacts with a work of hypermedia so as to take on some of the functions of a writer.

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