释义 |
tabloid美 ['tæb.lɔɪd] 英 ['tæblɔɪd] - n.小报(版面通常比大报小一半)
- adj.摘要的
- 网络图片版新闻;药片;文摘
adj. sensationalist,shocking,lurid,scandalous,yellow 1. | 小报(版面通常比大报小一半)a newspaper with small pages (usually half the size of those in larger papers) |
2. | 通俗小报(文短图多,内容多为名人逸事,常被视为不太严肃)a newspaper of this size with short articles and a lot of pictures and stories about famous people, often thought of as less serious than other newspapers |
| The story made the front page in all the tabloids. 这件事成了所有小报的头版新闻。 |
n. | 1. a small-format popular newspaper with a simple style, many photographs, and sometimes an emphasis on sensational stories 2. a piece of writing, especially a news story, in a condensed form 3. a newspaper with pages of a smaller size than standard newspapers, usually with very large headlines and pictures on the front page and often emphasizing shocking stories about famous people 4. a newspaper with fairly small pages mostly containing stories about famous people and not much serious news. More serious newspapers are called broadsheets, which have bigger pages, or compacts. 1. a small-format popular newspaper with a simple style, many photographs, and sometimes an emphasis on sensational stories 2. a piece of writing, especially a news story, in a condensed form 3. a newspaper with pages of a smaller size than standard newspapers, usually with very large headlines and pictures on the front page and often emphasizing shocking stories about famous people 4. a newspaper with fairly small pages mostly containing stories about famous people and not much serious news. More serious newspapers are called broadsheets, which have bigger pages, or compacts. | adj. | 1. relating to or characteristic of tabloid newspapers, especially in having a popular sensationalist style |
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