headline
1Headline — Pays d’origine France Genre musical Metal progressif Power metal Metal symphonique …
2headline — head‧line [ˈhedlaɪn] adjective 1. headline figure/rate ECONOMICS in Britain, a figure that shows the general level of inflation, including mortgage payments (= repayments on a loan for buying a house): • The headline rate of inflation is being… …
3headline — head line ( l[imac]n ), v. t. 1. To mention in a headline. [PJC] 2. To furnish with a headline (senses 1, 3, or 4). [PJC] 3. To publicise prominently in an advertisement. [PJC] …
4headline — ► NOUN 1) a heading at the top of an article or page in a newspaper or magazine. 2) (the headlines) a summary of the most important items of news. ► VERB 1) provide with a headline. 2) appear as the star performer at (a concert). DERIVATIVES …
5headline — [hed′līn΄] n. 1. a line at the top of a page in a book, giving the running title, page number, etc. ☆ 2. a line or lines, usually in larger type, at the top of a newspaper article, giving a short statement of its contents 3. an important item of… …
6Headline — Head line ( l[imac]n ), n. 1. (Print.) The line at the head or top of a page. [1913 Webster] 2. (Naut.) See {Headrope}. [1913 Webster] 3. (Journalism) A title for an article in a newspaper, sometimes one line, sometimes more, set in larger and… …
7headline — index caption, heading, rubric (title) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
8headline — / hɛdlain/, it. /ɛ dlain/ s. ingl. (propr. linea [line ] di testa [head ] , cioè titolo ), usato in ital. al masch. 1. (giorn.) [testo introduttivo a un articolo di giornale, stampato in grandi caratteri] ▶◀ sottotitolo, titolo. 2. (massm.)… …
9headline — 1670s, from HEAD (Cf. head) (n.) in sense heading of a book or chapter (c.1200) + LINE (Cf. line) (n.). Originally a printers term for the line at the top of a page containing the title and page number; used of newspapers from 1890, and… …
10headline — noun 1 title of an article in a newspaper ADJECTIVE ▪ newspaper, tabloid ▪ ‘Carnage at Airport!’ screamed the tabloid headline. ▪ banner, front page ▪ lurid (esp. BrE …