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tabloid

[ US /ˈtæbɫɔɪd/ ]
[ UK /tˈæblɔ‍ɪd/ ]
NOUN
  1. sensationalist journalism
  2. newspaper with half-size pages

How To Use tabloid In A Sentence

  • Both groups are forced to suffer the prejudices that have been fuelled by the tabloids and absorbed by an uninformed public.
  • ‘News’ is often more agitprop or tabloid than topical.
  • Sometime snooker world champion, perpetually in the tabloids for his substance-assisted high jinks, he's the quintessence of Essex wide-boy.
  • U.K. police arrested a female police officer on suspicion of corruption, as a multipronged probe into alleged wrongdoing tied to the News of the World tabloid continues to gather momentum. What's News—
  • I congratulated her on taking part in your elocution lessons, and she said you were helping them to be well-spoken tabloid editors. SUMMER OF SECRETS
  • A group of British tabloid journalists were pelted with eggs by a French campaigner yesterday and pursued across the camp. Times, Sunday Times
  • Human nature is greedy, devious and sleazy, and most salacious tabloid stories are merely reflecting that fact.
  • There are many tabloid weeklies in Hong Kong and how many can I read?
  • You say cable news squanders its resources by descending to tabloid sensationalism, personality cult shows and aping talk radio with high-testosterone shout shows.
  • As it was Mr. Justice Byrne was quite correct, as the word tabloid had indeed come to be used to mean the "compressed form or dose of anything"; during World War I, a small Sopwith biplane was known as the 'tabloid' within the Royal Air Force, whilst during the Everything2 New Writeups
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