Background information and useful web links
Writing headlines
Headlines
and secondary headlines (also
called
subheads
) tend to be written by sub-
editors rather than the journalist who wrote the article.
Front page headlines
are
especially important, as they have to attract potential
buyers to the newspaper, while
inside headlines have to make readers
want to read the articles, usually once they
have bought the paper.
The language of headlines in English (which
is sometimes called
headlines
/
hedlaIni:z
/)
is notorious for containing strange vocabulary (
tabloidese
/
t{blOIdi:z
/), unusual
grammar, and large amounts of wordplay
and cultural references, all of which make
them extremely challenging for non-native speakers to understand.
If students are
going to write headlines for other non-native speakers, they would be better off
limiting the amount of tricky language and focus instead on
the techniques for making
headlines more powerful, also explored within this section.
In the UK, newspapers have traditionally been divided into two types:
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: