Get Free Checker

masthead

[ US /ˈmæstˌhɛd/ ]
[ UK /mˈɑːsthɛd/ ]
NOUN
  1. a listing printed in all issues of a newspaper or magazine (usually on the editorial page) that gives the name of the publication and the names of the editorial staff, etc.
  2. the head or top of a mast
  3. the title of a newspaper or magazine; usually printed on the front page and on the editorial page

How To Use masthead In A Sentence

  • It powers the electrics from the masthead light to the line of dim bulbs in the shaft tunnel. LET NOT THE DEEP
  • Felix had told her that he was an editor on a computer trade journal; this was borne out by his name on the masthead. MISS MELVILLE REGRETS
  • He checked the masthead of the news-sheet and saw that it had been published in Anasty.
  • I still tend to think of myself as a newcomer to the magazine, having been on the masthead for only one-fifth of the now 100 issues.
  • It was not just a bit of beadledom from the top of the masthead; it was a permission to unleash the counterrevolutionary spirit against the sudden burst of enthusiasm for Mr. Zell’s program. Battle Lines Are Drawn at <i>The Los Angeles Times</i>
  • BTW, some readers mixed up Banner — the box at the top of the website, with masthead, which is a listing of the editorial and administrative staff for a publication. OpEdNews - Diary: Mouse Over Bubbles Are Live and Today's Rob's Blog, Including News of My Radio Interview on Thursday with Bruce Fein
  • He then describes how he was alarmed to see her masthead lights swinging rapidly to starboard.
  • Traditionally, mastheads and yardarms of RN ships were decorated with bunches of greenery, a task carried out by the boatswain's party in the dark hours of the night on December 24.
  • The cauldron-triple spiral triskelion in my masthead is a Celtic symbol of the 3-fold aspect of the Sacred Feminine - as maiden, mother and crone.
  • Captain-General Collerne's scarlet masthead pennant coiled over the waves like a serpent threatening to strike.
View all