Academic literature on the topic 'Newspapers - Headlines'

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Journal articles on the topic "Newspapers - Headlines"

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Udoh, Godspower, Nsikan Senam, and Kubiat Ebekut. "NEWS HEADLINE CONFIGURATION AND NEWSPAPER SELECTION IN UYO URBAN, NIGERIA." International Journal of Social Sciences & Economic Environment 7, no. 1 (June 30, 2022): 41–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.53882/ijssee.2022.0701005.

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This article examined the extent to which news headline configuration constitutes a factor in newspaper selection by readers in Uyo Urban of AkwaIbom State of Nigeria. Specifically, the study aimed to: examine the influence of headline deck on the readers’ selection of newspapers; ascertain the role of headline grammar in newspaper selection among readers; examine the influence of headline sentence structure on readers’ selection of newspapers; and find out whether headline font sizes play a role in respondents’ newspaper selection. The survey method was adopted in the study and the population comprised all the newspaper readers in Uyo, Nigeria, numbering 472,534 people. The sample size was 383 and the questionnaire was the research instrument. Findings showed that the readers: selected newspapers whose news headlines were arranged in one or two-deck formation; were attracted to newspapers whose headlines obeyed the rules of concord; selected newspapers whose headlines were set in the subject-predicate structure; and were attracted to headlines with conspicuous font sizes. It was therefore recommended that editors should always be mindful of grammatical, editorial and stylistic issues while casting newspaper headlines. Keywords:-Headlines, Configuration, News, Structure, Format, Deck, Grammar.
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Al-saedi, Hayder. "A Critical Discourse Analysis of the Representation of Iraq in Media Discourse (Newspaper Headlines)." International Journal of Language and Literary Studies 2, no. 2 (June 7, 2020): 178–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.36892/ijlls.v2i2.307.

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The current study aims to investigate the representation of Iraq in newspapers headlines. It investigates how the newspapers headlines had covered the Iraq – ISIS conflict. 48 headlines (data collection) were collected from two different newspapers; twenty-four headlines from an Iraqi newspaper Alsabah Newspaper and twenty-four headlines from an international newspaper AlQuds Al-Arabi Newspaper. The data were sampled and analyzed using the Ideological Square which was proposed by van Dijk (1998, 2006). The findings revealed that the sampled headlines of these two newspapers show different underlying ideologies in addressing the Iraq – ISIS conflict. It concluded that the headlines of every newspaper expressed their ideologies in a positive representation (US) and a negative representation (Them).
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Ramadhani Nyagani, Msei, and Nasibu Musa. "Illocutionary Speech Act Analysis in Nipashe Newspapers’ Headlines." Issue 6 3, no. 6 (December 23, 2022): 24–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.46606/eajess2022v03i06.0234.

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The purpose of this study was to look at headline writers’ intentions from Tanzanian Nipashe newspapers and classify them in accordance with illocutionary speech acts Taxonomy by Searle (1979). The study employed a qualitative research approach and a descriptive research design. The study involved the population of 1095 front-page newspaper headlines. A sample of 130 headlines was chosen and each headline was classified according to the taxonomy of illocutionary Speech Act. Out of the five categories of speech acts developed by J.R. Searle (1979), which served as the theoretical foundation for the study, four speech acts were found to be executed in the sampled newspaper headlines, with the representative speech act type predominating. Claiming, urging, remembering, reporting, recommending, assuring, bragging, concluding and deducing were some of the assertives' or representatives' illocutionary acts that appeared in the headlines. Directive headlines surveyed were used by copy editors to request, order, command, question and suggest that readers of the newspapers do something. Some headlines included commissive speech acts, which copy editors used to commit themselves to future actions. The headlines with expressive illocutionary acts were used by the editors to thank, pardon, apologize, blame, deplore, congratulate, regret and praise. There was no declarative speech act performed in the Nipashe newspaper headlines. The study recommends that the newspaper writers continue executing assertive speech acts in their headlines if they wish to tell the truth, use commissive speech acts if they want to make commitments about future events, use directive speech acts if they want readers to do something, use expressive speech acts to draw the attention of their readers and express their emotions and feelings and use declarative speech acts if they want to change the world and the attitudes of their readers at large.
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M.K Musa, Nasibu, Gechemba D. Nyakoe, and Kenneth Odhiambo. "Optimisation of Online Newspaper Headline Length with Characters." July to September 2020 1, no. 2 (September 7, 2020): 150–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.46606/eajess2020v01i02.0030.

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The question of how many characters should an online newspaper headline have is still debatable. This study therefore, sought to examine the optimal length for the online newspaper headlines by using characters as the factor for online news readership. In an attempt to establish an optimal headline length, a sample of 259 out of 730 headlines published by the Tanzanian newspapers of Mwananchi and The Citizen from July 2017 to June 2018 was collected. The study employed Coschedule to obtain the number of characters for each online newspaper headlines. The data were quantitatively analysed with SPSS version 20. The study observed that 72.2 % of 259 headlines that Mwananchi and The Citizen digital journalists designed were short ranging from 16 to 45 characters long on the average. The study accepted the null hypothesis that there was no significant statistical difference in readership between short and long online newspaper headlines. This finding was against the long-standing print newspaper assumption that newspaper readers prefer short headlines to the long ones. The study recommends other studies on the same topic to have a comparative study on headline readership across search engines, social platforms and languages.
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Sulaymonova, Maftuna Oxunjon Qizi. "NEWSPAPER STYLE: THE CHARACTERISTICS OF HEADLINES IN NEWSPAPERS." CURRENT RESEARCH JOURNAL OF PHILOLOGICAL SCIENCES 02, no. 11 (November 1, 2021): 107–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.37547/philological-crjps-02-11-24.

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To get access to unbiased, accurate, objective information is a vital necessity in present-day society. From this perspective, the role of mass media can hardly be overestimated. It is common knowledge that there are different types of mass media: print media (newspapers, magazines), their electronic version (in the Internet) as well as radio and television. The newspaper as a form of the mass media is known for several ages. However, the investigation of the language in newspapers has started only in the mid-20th century. The principles of creating and analyzing newspaper headlines have not been widely explored. Some features of newspaper style are considered in this article
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Studer, Patrick. "Textual structures in eighteenth-century newspapers." Media and Language Change 4, no. 1 (January 31, 2003): 19–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/jhp.4.1.03stu.

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Newspapers have recently become attractive objects of interest to linguists, but little research has been done thus far on news discourse of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The present study contributes to filling this gap by reporting results from a corpus-based study of early English-language newspaper headlines. The analysis reveals that the modern segmentation of news into the three elements of headline, lead, and news story cannot be applied to forerunners of modern newspapers. Instead, a classification model is proposed that takes account of the specific properties of the genre. The physical organisation of early newspapers is first considered, so as to be able to identify typographical categories of headings. In a second step, the intended textual functions of headlines are identified, along with typical correlations of headline forms and functions. Applying these categories to an eighteenth-century corpus reveals general tendencies of text structuring in early newspapers.
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Lewin-Jones, Jenny, and Mike Webb. "Ideology in Disguise: Place Name Metonyms and the Discourse of Newspaper Headlines." Sociological Research Online 18, no. 4 (November 2013): 167–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.5153/sro.3185.

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‘Place metonyms’ are figures of speech which use place names as shortcuts, for example Whitehall to mean the British civil service, or Europe for the institutions of the European Union. The paper examines place metonyms in the headlines of two British newspapers, the Sun and the Guardian. Using evidence from a 12-month period in 2011–12, a headline-by-headline linguistic analysis is used to work out the denotations and wider connotations of each metonym. This critical discourse approach suggests that such place metonyms in headlines have three problematic effects: firstly they may conceal agency and responsibility within some public bodies, secondly for some social institutions, they give an exaggerated impression of unity and homogeneity, and finally for a further list of institutions, they offer relentless pejorative evaluative colouring. These effects are found not only in the right-of-centre Sun but also to some extent in the more progressive newspaper, the Guardian. The authors speculate that it may be difficult for readers of newspapers to think critically about place metonyms in headlines. In particular, place metonyms may subtly reinforce any impression that public institutions are fixed entities, not susceptible to challenge, and may facilitate the polarised value-judgments that are characteristic of ‘headlinese’. Such social constructions support some of the central tenets of neo-liberal, capitalist ideology, and so subtly add to the news media's distorting representations of public matters.
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Arshad, Muhammad, and Nazish Khan. "A critical discourse analysis of the Pakistani newspaper headlines on the federal budget for FY 2021-2022." Journal of Humanities, Social and Management Sciences (JHSMS) 2, no. 1 (October 21, 2021): 176–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.47264/idea.jhsms/2.1.15.

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This research study is based on the Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) of news headlines of different Urdu and English newspapers on the federal Pakistani budget for the fiscal year 2021-2022. This research is descriptive qualitative in its nature. Fairclough (1995a) model of three dimensions (text, discourse and social practice) was used to analyse text. 21 different headlines from renowned Pakistani national Urdu and English newspapers on June 12, 2021, were collected through purposive sampling techniques of data collection. The study highlights the concealed ideology of newspaper editors who aims to arouse masses by using stirring vocabulary. The significance of this study lies in the vocabulary of news items of newspapers headlines which serve as an important medium of presenting ideologies. Thematic and the linguistic analysis of newspaper headlines highlight those newspapers are concealed with important orientations for readers. The study draws the conclusion that news headlines represent editors’ ideologies on their political inclinations and alignment in spite of their claim to be impartial. The newspaper editors exploit headlines to form a way of thinking on issues of national concern to achieve their political interests.
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Arshad, Muhammad, and Nazish Khan. "Motion of No-confidence against Imran Khan: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Newspaper Headlines." Pakistan Journal of Applied Social Sciences 13, no. 2 (September 8, 2022): 17–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.46568/pjass.v13i2.658.

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The current research study is aimed at critical discourse analysis of the newspaper headlines about the motion of no-confidence against Imran Khan in the parliament of Pakistan. The study is descriptive qualitative. Fairclough’s (1992) framework for critical discourse analysis of a communicative event was used for this study. Twenty-six newspaper headlines were selected from reputed Pakistani English and Urdu newspapers. The data was collected through purposive sampling techniques. The critical discourse analysis of newspaper headlines elucidated how the same news item was differently presented in different newspapers due to the ideological perspectives of their editors. The study reflects that the editors of newspapers have concealed ideologies that aim to create a sensation among their readers by employing a stimulating lexicon. These headlines function as a tool for propagating the hidden ideologies of editors to achieve their concealed objectives. The study draws the conclusion that newspaper headlines are representations of the editors’ ideologies which reflect their political, religious and personal propensity regardless of their claim to be unbiased and neutral in their field. The newspaper editors exploit headlines to shape readers’ thinking on issues of national concern.
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Guzikova, V. V., and V. Е. Nesterova. "Newspaper headlines as a tool for linguistic modeling of police image." Philology at MGIMO 7, no. 2 (July 6, 2021): 25–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.24833/2410-2423-2021-2-26-25-37.

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The article considers the issue of linguistic modeling of the image of the police in the newspa[1]per discourse, in newspaper headlines in particular. This article is relevant and determined by the need to study the representation of reality in the media discourse and its linguistic manifestation. In addition, the media have recently paid close attention to the coverage of the activities of social institutions, especially with regard to law enforcement agencies. The authors describe the characteristics of the mass media discourse as one of the tools for implementing public power, organizing the activities of political and social institutions, and forming an image. The paper considers the specific features and functions of the newspaper discourse, and also considers the newspaper headline, which acts as a pragmatic component of a newspaper article contributing to the creation of information and social mediation between addressees and addressers in order to exert a regulatory influence on public opinion. The article focuses on the structural, semantic and stylistic analysis of the newspaper headlines that represent information about law enforcement agencies’ activities in Russia and the United States. The authors divide the publications into neutral (“Arguments and Facts”, “USA Today”, “Wall Street Journal”), pro-government (“Newspaper. Ru”, “Rossiyskaya Gazeta” and “Moskovsky Komsomolets”, “Associated Press”) and opposition newspapers (“Novaya Gazeta”, “Kommersant”, “The New York Times”, “Washington Post”). In total, 60 newspaper headlines were analyzed for the period from September to December 2020. The results show that the texts of newspaper reports perform informative and pragmatic functions, and the newspaper headline is the key to understanding the author’s position and intentions. Lexical, grammatical, and stylistic differences in the headlines of Russian and American newspapers devoted to the activities of law enforcement agencies were identified, as well as language techniques for exerting speech influence on the reader and linguistic modeling of the police image.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Newspapers - Headlines"

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Salomonsson, Tina. "The use of verbs in newspaper headlines : A case study of two British newspapers." Thesis, Linnéuniversitetet, Institutionen för språk och litteratur, SOL, 2011. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:lnu:diva-14720.

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This essay deals with verb use in headlines. More specifically, the aim was to see if therewere any differences between two British newspapers in how verbs were used in headlines. Inorder to carry out this study, 100 headlines were collected from each of the newspapers andorganized into groups; headlines that included verbs and headlines that did not. A decisionwas made to only look at two types of verbs; main verbs and auxiliaries.The results showed that The Independent as well as The Sun generally contains verbs. TheIndependent has a slightly higher rate when main verbs and auxiliaries are put together.However, The Sun uses more auxiliaries. Only primary and modal auxiliaries are used in TheSun as well as in The Independent, no semi-auxiliaries were found in any of the newspaperheadlines. Another interesting fact was that The Independent has removed all auxiliaries in theforms of be. Then Sun too seems to prefer headlines without this particular auxiliary but therewere a few headlines which included forms of be.A comparison between the results presented in this study and a study carried out by Mårdhduring the late 1970’s shows similar results. The present study is far more limited in itsmaterial but the parts that could be compared shows that the verb use in newspaper headlineshas not changed much during the past few decades.
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Chiang, Chi Meng Glydis. "A contrastive analysis of English and Chinese headlines of Hong Kong local news stories." HKBU Institutional Repository, 2002. http://repository.hkbu.edu.hk/etd_ra/487.

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Lee, Kwok-piu Bill. "A study of linguistic features in Hong Kong Chinese newspaper headlines /." View the Table of Contents & Abstract, 2006. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record/B36845541.

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Ramstedt, Rebecka, and Susanna Ahnlund. "Health in the headlines : How two Indian newspapers treat antibiotic resistance." Thesis, Södertörns högskola, Institutionen för samhällsvetenskaper, 2012. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:sh:diva-19510.

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In India, there is no regulation of antibiotics and allegedly the use has doubled since 2006. Indiscriminate use of antibiotics gives rise to development of resistant bacteria. The media has, according to the theories used in this study, a responsibility to educate and empower the people to make personal judgments about health risks. This study focuses on the extent to which two of the largest English-language newspapers in India, the Hindu and Times of India, report on antibiotic resistance; and also, how the journalists and editors on these newspapers look upon their profession and responsibilities when it comes to reporting on health issues. In addition to the quantitative content analysis, which comprises 162 articles about antibiotic resistance published between 2006 and 2012, six in-depth interviews were conducted. The results show that the amount of coverage on antibiotic resistance increased 2010 when the Lancet published a report on new findings of multi-resistant bacteria in India. This indicates that an event was needed to qualify antibiotic resistance for the news pages. Our study also shows that preventive measures which can be taken to reduce the emerge of resistant bacteria are often included in the articles and that they are addressed to doctors as well as to the general public. On the other hand, information on the magnitude of the problem is rarely presented. Scientists are often quoted or referred to, and the journalists of the investigated newspapers state that they have a great confidence in them. Furthermore, the respondents express that they have a responsibility to report on health issues. They believe that their newspapers have a major influence on its readership, and that their reporting can make a difference in the health situation in India. Some of them mention, however, that their overall impact is limited since their newspapers only reach the literate middle-class.
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Svensson, Katrin, and Cecilia Tiberg. "Empowerment in the headlines : How three Indian newspapers report on gender inequality." Thesis, Södertörns högskola, Institutionen för kommunikation, medier och it, 2010. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:sh:diva-6400.

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India is the world’s largest democracy, one of the fastest growing economies and an enormous market for newspapers. It is also a country with deeply rooted gender biases where women are highly discriminated and marginalized at all levels of the society. The media is considered an important agent of power. Therefore this study focuses on how and to what extent the three Indian newspapers Hindustan Times, The Hindu and Times of India report on and approach gender inequality and women’s empowerment issues. How do journalists look upon their role and the role of the press in the women’s empowerment process? A quantitative content analysis was performed during five weeks (October 18 –November 21, 2010) and 69 articles that highlight gender inequality and women’s empowerment were found, collected and coded. This content analysis is combined with a qualitative method. Two informant interviews and six respondent interviews with journalists are included in the study. The most common main topics of the articles found were Law and amendments, Women’s movement, Political power, Reproductive health and Development. Five out of six interviewed reporters believe that their newspapers have a major impact on its readership and all six respondents were of the opinion that their newspapers encourage reporting on these matters. Although they believe that media’s overall influence is limited. The Hindu and Times of India report more on gender inequality and women’sempowerment issues than Hindustan Times does and some of the respondents express that The Hindu promotes development journalism more than the other two newspapers do.
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Lee, Kwok-piu Bill, and 李國標. "A study of linguistic features in Hong Kong Chinese newspaper headlines." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2006. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B45007627.

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Ryberg, Ingrid. "Does Newspapers' Political Alignment Influence the Emotional Language in British Newspapers? : An Analysis of Headlines about the Nuclear Accident in Fukushima on 11 March 2011." Thesis, Högskolan i Halmstad, Sektionen för humaniora (HUM), 2013. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hh:diva-22436.

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The main aim of this essay is to examine the extent to which journalists choose certain emotional words in order to influence public opinion in a certain political direction. A number of headlines about the nuclear accident in Fukushima on 11th March 2011 in three British broadsheets with different political alignment form the basis of my analysis. To identify emotional language, I have used a method developed by Professor Friedrich Ungerer: the “emotional inferencing system”. There are emotional triggers in all the broadsheets. In most cases, the triggers in the different broadsheets are quite similar. There seem to be no clear connections between emotions, or the strength of emotions, and the political alignment of the newspapers. A larger corpus or a corpus on a different issue would possibly imply a different result.
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Jakimavičiūtė, Dovilė. "Newspaper style: the headline." Bachelor's thesis, Lithuanian Academic Libraries Network (LABT), 2013. http://vddb.laba.lt/obj/LT-eLABa-0001:E.02~2013~D_20130608_143427-37015.

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The paper focuses on the analyses of stylistic peculiarities in newspaper headlines. It provides an overview of stylistics, functional styles (newspaper style in more detail), and features of headlines. Also stylistic devices are reviewed and classified. In the empirical part 150 headlines are analyzed while 56 of them are provided as illustrative examples and analyzed in greater detail. Stylistic devices found in the newspaper headlines are allocated to the group they belong to and where it is possible classification of a stylistic devices is provided.
Darbo paskirtis - stilistinių ypatybių analizė laikrščių antraštėse. Yra pateikiama teorinė medžiaga apie stilistiką, funkcinius stilius (laikraštinis stilius aptariamas smulkiau) ir antraščių savybės. Taip pat apžvelgtos stilistinės priemonės ir pateikta jų klasifikacija. Empirinėje dalyje yra išanalizuota 150 antraščių ir 56 pateiktos kaip pavyzdžiai ir išanalizuoti detaliau. Stilistinės priemonės rastos laikraščių antraštėse priskirtos grupei kuriai jos priklauso ir kur yra įmanoma, pateikiama stilistinės priemonės klasifikacija.
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Jia, Ting Ting. "A comparative study of English-language newspaper headlines." Thesis, University of Macau, 2011. http://umaclib3.umac.mo/record=b2525502.

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Schildkraut, Jaclyn V. "Homicide in the headlines an analysis of the newspaper reporting of Baltimore homicides of 2010." Master's thesis, University of Central Florida, 2011. http://digital.library.ucf.edu/cdm/ref/collection/ETD/id/5027.

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Baltimore is notorious for its recent and storied history of crime. The current study examines the treatment of homicide victims in Baltimore newspapers. In 2010, 222 homicides occurred in Baltimore, according to the city's homicide map. One hundred and sixty-five were discussed in The Baltimore Sun, the city's most-circulated paper. Based on the inclusion or exclusion of particular cases and the manner in which cases were discussed, conclusions can be drawn about the media's perception of a case's newsworthiness. Specifically, cases with particular details that varied significantly from a "normal" homicide were found to be most newsworthy, determined in part by analyzing the frequency of reporting, placement of coverage within the newspaper, and word count allocated to the discussion of crime.
ID: 029810530; System requirements: World Wide Web browser and PDF reader.; Mode of access: World Wide Web.; Thesis (M.A.)--University of Central Florida, 2011.; Includes bibliographical references (p. 68-76).
M.A.
Masters
Sociology
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Books on the topic "Newspapers - Headlines"

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Alves, Dinis Manuel. Foi você que pediu um bom título? Coimbra: Quarteto, 2003.

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Peng, Chaocheng. Biao ti di yi shu. [Peking]: Ren min ri bao chu ban she, 1985.

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Benedetti, Andrea De. L' informazione liofilizzata: Uno studio sui titoli di giornale, 1992-2003. Firenze: F. Cesati, 2004.

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Mêrgesorî, Miḧemed. Manşêt u karîgerîyekanî le r̄ojnamewanîy Kurdîda. Silêmanî [Kurdistan, Iraq]: Ber̄êweberêtîy Çap u Biławkirdinewey Silêmanî, 2011.

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John, Morley. Truth to tell: Form and function in newspaper headlines. Bologna: CLUEB, 1998.

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Press, Tangerine, ed. World's dumbest signs, ads, and newspaper headlines. New York, NY: Tangerine Press, 2005.

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J, Fleming Thomas. Behind the headlines: The story of American newspapers. New York: Walker, 1989.

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Leno, Jay. Headlines: Real but ridiculous samplings from America's newspapers. New York, NY: Warner Books, 1989.

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Starkulla, Heinz. Marktplätze sozialer Kommunikation: Bausteine zu einer Medientheorie. München: R. Fischer, 1993.

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1945-, Türenç Tufan, and Kaplan Sefa 1956-, eds. O manşetler: Yazanların kaleminden manşetlerin öyküsü. Istanbul: Hürriyet Gazetecilik, 2006.

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Book chapters on the topic "Newspapers - Headlines"

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Bin, Xin, Gao Xiaoli, Shen Lei, and Wang Jingping. "Reported speech in Chinese news headlines." In Reported Speech in Chinese and English Newspapers, 66–95. New York : Routledge, 2021. | Series: China perspectives: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003173687-4.

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Gupta, Vishal. "Automatic Extraction of Headlines from Punjabi Newspapers." In Applied Algorithms, 237–44. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-04126-1_20.

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Schneider, Kristina. "3. The Emergence and Development of Headlines in English Newspapers." In English Media Texts – Past and Present, 45. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/pbns.80.05sch.

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Park, Minhyung. "Linguistic Differences in Headlines: Comparison Between Korean and American Newspapers." In Second Language Learning and Teaching, 183–92. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-04981-2_13.

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Chilpuri, Vishnu Sai Reddy, Saaman Nadeem, Tahir Mehmood, and Muhammad Yaqoob. "Sarcasm Detection in Newspaper Headlines." In Data Science and Emerging Technologies, 237–50. Singapore: Springer Nature Singapore, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-97-0293-0_18.

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Thogmartin, Clyde. "The pragmatics of French newspaper headlines." In Levels of Linguistic Adaptation, 249. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/pbns.6.2.16tho.

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Chali, Yllias, and Maheedhar Kolla. "Producing Headline Summaries for Newspaper Articles." In Advances in Artificial Intelligence, 422–26. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/11424918_45.

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Studer, Patrick. "Text-initiating strategies in eighteenth-century newspaper headlines." In Opening Windows on Texts and Discourses of the Past, 65–79. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/pbns.134.08stu.

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Sala, Michele. "The Expression of Bias in (Online) Newspaper Headlines." In The Routledge Handbook of Discourse and Disinformation, 17–32. London: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003224495-3.

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Yoshimura, Eriko, Seiji Tsuchiya, and Hirokazu Watabe. "Computer-Generated Conversation Based on Newspaper Headline Interpretation." In Knowledge-Based and Intelligent Information and Engineering Systems, 400–409. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-15387-7_44.

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Conference papers on the topic "Newspapers - Headlines"

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Nypadymka, A. S. "The power and accuracy of headlines in modern newspapers." In PHILOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND TRANSLATION STUDIES: EUROPEAN POTENTIAL. Baltija Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.30525/978-9934-26-348-4-47.

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Ojebuyi, B. R., M. I. Lasisi, and U. O. Ajetunmobi. "Between Coronavirus and COVID-19: Influence of Nigerian Newspapers’ Headline Construction on Audience Information-Seeking Behaviour." In COMMUNICATION AND TECHNOLOGY CONGRESS. ISTANBUL AYDIN UNIVERSITY, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.17932/ctc.2021/ctc21.002.

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Since the onset of the new coronavirus, the mass media, across the globe, have continued to draw special attention to the disease by adopting different pragmatic and rhetoric strategies. In Nigeria for instance, the news media have continued to draw people’s attention to the virus by using COVID-19 and coronavirus as synonymous lexical entities in the headlines of their news stories. These lexical choices are believed to have some influence on how the audience understand and seek information about the virus. However, existing studies in media and health communication have not copiously explored the relationship between the lexical choices by media to report the COVID-19 pandemic and people’s information-seeking behaviour about the virus. This study was, therefore, designed to investigate how Nigerian journalists used coronavirus and COVID-19 as the key terms to report the virus and how the pragma-semantic implicatures of the lexical choices influenced audience information-seeking behaviours. Pragmatic Acts and Information-Seeking theories were employed as the theoretical framework while online survey and content analysis were adopted as methods. Findings show that although Nigerian journalists used coronavirus (SD=2.090) more often than COVID-19 (SD=1.924) in the headlines, the audience employed COVID-19 (M=2.23, SD=.810) more than coronavirus (M=1.88, SD=.783) while searching information about the virus. Besides, journalists’ use of COVID-19 in the headlines to educate (Chi-square =37.615, df=11, P<.000), warn (Chi-square =26.153, df=11, P<.006), assess (Chi-square= 24.350, df=11, P<.011) and sensitise (Chi-square =24.262, df=11, P<.012) facilitated audience interest in seeking information about the virus than when coronavirus is used as a keyword in the headlines. The lexical choices made by journalists to report a health crisis such as the COVID-19 pandemic have implications for citizens’ knowledge about the crisis.
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Muratova, I. A. "Transformation of English grammatical and lexical structures in the headlines of British and American newspapers." In 6th Conference "Advanced Studies in Science: Theory and Practice". Global Partnership on Development of Scientific Cooperation LLC., 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.17809/25(2015)-10.

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Roy, Samapika, Sukhada, and Anil Kr Singh. "An Analysis of Indian English News Headlines." In GLOCAL Conference on Asian Linguistic Anthropology 2020. The GLOCAL Unit, SOAS University of London, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.47298/cala2020.13-1.

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News Headlines (NHs) are of the most creative uses of natural languages in a media text. An NH is the frontline of a news article. Specific characteristics make NHs standout: for instance, article omission, use of active verbs, dropping the copula to save space and to attract the reader’s attention to the most significant words, etc. Some research has been done on linguistic analysis of British English NH, Hindi-Urdu NHs, but hardly any work has been conducted on IndENH. This paper attempts to analyze Indian English newspaper headlines (IndENH), and aims to contribute to the accuracy of News Headline parsing. This study determines the linguistic features of the IndENH, to improve the quality of the parsed output of NHs. This paper covers sentence construction, tense, punctuation marks, metaphors, etc. for linguistic analysis.
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Saeed, Hadeel. "The Impact of Ideological Orientations on the Differentiation between the Arabic and the English Styles in Translating Newspaper Headlines." In 3rd International Conference on Language and Education. Cihan University-Erbil, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.24086/iclangedu2023/paper.938.

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Translation process is subject to many non-linguistic factors that clearly affect the course of the translation process and impose their logic on both the translator and the translation product. Perhaps newspaper headlines represent one of the textual models whose translation from one language to another is subject to such factors that interact and overlap with the translator’s skill and his linguistic knowledge that put their mark on his final product. The most prominent of these factors is the ideological orientations of the translator and his knowledge of the intellectual and cultural background of the audience to whom the translated text is intended. This paper aims to trace the impact of the translator’s ideological orientations and his knowledge of the requirements of translation clients and readers in differentiation between the Arabic and the English styles of translating newspaper headlines, by reviewing a group of newspaper headlines. It became clear from the study that translating newspaper headlines include a lot ideological influences that urge the translator to interfere in the text to achieve goals of an ideological nature, most notably meeting the needs of a specific audience of readers, and this ideological intervention led to the differentiation between the Arabic style and the English styles in translating newspaper headlines.
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Shrikhande, Parnavi, Vikram Setty, and Dr Ashish Sahani. "Sarcasm Detection in Newspaper Headlines." In 2020 IEEE 15th International Conference on Industrial and Information Systems (ICIIS). IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iciis51140.2020.9342742.

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Winita, Sucia, and Ermanto Ermanto. "Euphemisms in the Headlines of Haluan Newspaper." In Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Languages and Arts (ICLA 2018). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icla-18.2019.82.

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McClelland, Paul, Frank Dennis, and Mark Liddiard. "Practical Implementation of National Clearance Levels at Dounreay." In ASME 2003 9th International Conference on Radioactive Waste Management and Environmental Remediation. ASMEDC, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/icem2003-4629.

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Clearance is a very important part of any effective waste management strategy for both operating and decommissioning nuclear facilities. Radioactive waste disposal capacity is becoming an increasingly valuable resource and costs for disposal of radioactive wastes continue to dramatically rise. Considerable cost savings may be realised by efficient segregation of essentially non-radioactive material from radioactive wastes. The release of these materials from licensed nuclear sites for disposal, reuse or recycle without further regulatory controls is commonly referred to by the nuclear industry as “clearance”. Although much effort has been directed at establishing national clearance levels, below which, materials may be released without further regulatory controls, there is little practical guidance regarding implementation into local waste management programmes. Compliance with regulatory clearance limits is a relatively straightforward technical exercise involving appropriate management control and monitoring of the material. Whilst this is sufficient to avoid prosecution for breach of regulatory requirements, it is not sufficient to avoid a myriad of political and public relations land mines. When material is unconditionally released, unless additional attention is given to management of its future destination off-site, it may end up anywhere. The worst nightmare for a waste manager at a nuclear site is headlines in local and national newspapers such as, “RADIOACTIVE WASTE DISPOSED IN LOCAL MUNICIPAL LANDFILL,” or, “RADIOACTIVE WASTE USED AS CONSTRUCTION MATERIAL FOR CHILDRENS PLAYGROUND,” etc. Even if the material were released legally, the cost of recovering from such a situation is potentially very large, and such public relations disasters could threaten to end the clearance programme at the given site, if not nationally. This paper describes how national regulatory clearance levels have been implemented for the decommissioning of the Dounreay nuclear site in the far north of Scotland. It specifically focuses on the management of public relations aspects of clearance in order to limit the exposure to non-regulatory pressures and liabilities associated with clearance programmes from nuclear sites. The issues are put into context for uncontaminated wastes, trace contaminated wastes and management of contaminated land.
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Hridoy, Md Nasir Hossain, Mohammad Mohitul Islam, and Ayesha Khatun. "Aspect Based Sentiment Analysis for Bangla Newspaper Headlines." In 2021 3rd International Conference on Sustainable Technologies for Industry 4.0 (STI). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/sti53101.2021.9732611.

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Bari, Kiran. "Sarcasm Detection of Newspaper Headlines Using LSTM-RNN." In 2023 5th International Conference on Advances in Computing, Communication Control and Networking (ICAC3N). IEEE, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icac3n60023.2023.10541797.

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Reports on the topic "Newspapers - Headlines"

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Дирда, Ірина Анатоліївна, Марина Вікторівна Малоіван, and Анна Олександрівна Томіліна. The peculiarities of headlines in English discourse through the examples from Daily Mail and the New Yorker. Видавнича група «Наукові перспективи», May 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.31812/123456789/7074.

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The paper in question outlines the main peculiarities of the phenomenon of headlines in terms of English discourse. Headlines are thought to be a critical component of journalism and media, as they shape initial readers’ impressions of a story serving as the first point of their contact. Using a corpus of headlines from various English-language publications (to be more precise, those of The Daily Mail and The New Yorker) the paper studies the linguistic features and strategies used in them. According to the conducted analysis it has been revealed that a range of linguistic devices, such as puns, alliteration, and rhyme are typical for headlines the use of which is justified by the desire to grab readers’ attention and make the headline more catchy. Additionally, headlines frequently employ exaggeration, hyperbole, and sensationalism to appeal to readers’ emotions and generate clicks. However, the study also finds that headlines can vary significantly across different genres and publications. For example, tabloid newspapers tend to prioritize sensationalism and entertainment value, while more serious publications tend to employ more understated and informative headlines. The relevance of the study is determined as well by the significant expansion of the influence of the media on society, as well as the growing interest in the methods by which this influence is strengthened. Overall, the paper sheds light on the complex and multifaceted phenomenon of headlines implemented in English discourse. By understanding the linguistic and rhetorical strategies employed in headlines, readers can better assess the accuracy and credibility of the suggested information and gain a more nuanced understanding of current events.
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