Key words in the media

jo12 English Assessment Year

jo12 English Assessment Year

Stefan Feuerstein

Stefan Feuerstein

Kartei Details

Karten 333
Lernende 19
Sprache English
Kategorie Englisch
Stufe Universität
Erstellt / Aktualisiert 05.12.2012 / 29.11.2017
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subscription

an agreement to pay an amount of money so that you will receive something such as a magazine or a service

newsroom

an office at a television or radio station or a newspaper where news is collected and reports are prepared for broadcasting or publishing

editor

a person who is in charge of a newspaper or magazine

editorial

an article in a newspaper which expresses the editor's opinion on a subject of particular interest at the present time.

hack

a journalist whose work is low in quality or lacks imagination

column

a regular newspaper or magazine article on a particular subject or by a particular reporter

columnist

someone who writes a regular article for a newspaper or magazine

correspondent

a person employed by a newspaper, a television station, etc. to report on a particular subject or send reports from a foreign country

source

person or people who provide information to a journalist

on/off the record

refers to whether information given can be used for publication or not

credible (adjective)

someone or something that can be trusted

Fleet Street

the road in London where most of Britain's national newspapers were produced in the past

red tops

a tabloid newspaper, particularly those considered to be of a lower standard than the broadsheets

article

a piece of writing on a particular subject in a newspaper or magazine

obituary

a report, especially in a newspaper, which gives the news of someone's death and details about their life

gossip column

the part of a newspaper in which you finde stories about the social and private lives of famous people

banner headline

a large title of a story in a newspaper that stretches across the top of the front page

scoop

a story or piece of news discovered and published by one newspaper before all the others

headline

the title of a newspaper story or the main points of a television/radio programme

caption

a short piece of text under a picture in a book, magazine or newspaper which describes the picture or explains what the people in it are doing or saying

chequebook journalism

when a newspaper persuades someone involved in a news story to give their report of events by paying them a lot of money

parachute journalism

often derogatory term used to describe the practice thrusting journalists into an area to report on a story in which the reporter has little knowledge or experience

citizen journalist/journalism

members of the public become active in writing about or recording events

investigative journalism

a form of journalism in which reporters deeply investigate a single topic of interest

breach

an act of breaking a law, promise, agreement or relationship

libel

a piece of writing which contains bad and false things about a person

slander

a false spoken statement about someone which damages their reputation

action

a legal process that decided in a court of law

lawsuit

a problem taken to a court of law, by an ordinary person or an organization rather than the police, for a legal decision

gag (verb)

to prevent a person or organization from talking or writing about a particular subject (often passive)

watchdog

a person or organization responsible for making certain that companies maintain particular standards and do not act illegally

share (part of a business)

one of the equal parts into which the ownership of a company is divided and which can be bought by members of the public

shareholder

someone who ownes shares in a company

blue-chip (adjective)

a blue-chip company or investment is one that can be trusted and is not likely to fail

stock exchange

a place where parts of the ownership of companies are bought and sold, or the organization of people whose job is to do this buying or selling

bear market

a time when the price of shares is falling and a lot of people are selling them

bull market

a time when the prices of most shares are rising

decline (verb)

to gradually become less, worse, or lower

drop (verb)

to move to a lower level, or cause something to move to a lower level

slide (verb)

to go into a worse state, often through lack of control or care