- type.
Headlines in
English often use a set of
grammatical rules known as
headlinese,
designed to meet
stringent space requirements by, for example, leaving...
- used,
usually pejoratively, to
refer to news-style writing.
Another is
headlinese.
Newspapers generally adhere to an
expository writing style. Over time...
-
columnists have used a
jargon called slanguage or
Varietyese (a form of
headlinese) that
refers especially to the
movie industry, and has
largely been adopted...
- most
frequently in rhetoric,
casual speech, non-standard varieties, and
headlinese, the
writing style used in
newspaper headlines. Sometimes,
these omissions...
-
grammar of the sentence. This type of
construction is not
uncommon in
headlinese, the
condensed grammar used in
newspaper headlines. It is a
trait of natural...
-
Corporate communication Corporate identity Corporate propaganda Doublespeak Headlinese Journalese Legalese Military terminology Officialese Weasel word Bryan...
- 1896 to
report positions of two
comets was
encoded for data integrity.
Headlinese, a
similar shorthand in
newspaper headlines SMS language, abbreviated...
- 2013-08-23 at the
Wayback Machine,
October 28, 2009,
Russia Beyond the
Headlinese "Krigarkonungen och kåldolmarna".
Svenska Dagbladet (in Swedish). 2013-11-30...
-
headline or article;
examples include "H'wood" and "biz".
Using a form of
headlinese that the
newspaper called "slanguage", "Sticks Nix Hick Pix"
means that...
- Book I, Part 4
Newspaper headlines are
written in a
telegraphic style (
headlinese)
which often omits the co****,
creating syntactic ambiguity. A common...