tabloids
英 [ˈtæblɔɪdz]
美 [ˈtæblɔɪdz]
n. 小报(版面通常比大报小一半); 通俗小报(文短图多,内容多为名人逸事,常被视为不太严肃)
tabloid的复数
柯林斯词典
- N-COUNT (版面小、文章短、图片多的)通俗小报
Atabloidis a newspaper that has small pages, short articles, and lots of photographs. Tabloids are often considered to be less serious than other newspapers.- 'The British tabloids called me leggy and stunning,' she recalls.
“当时的英国小报都说我‘双腿修长’、‘艳惊四座’,”她回忆道。
- 'The British tabloids called me leggy and stunning,' she recalls.
双语例句
- The private lives of those superstars are often commented on by tabloids.
那些超级明星的私生活经常受到小报的评论。 - The Prime Minister is no favourite of the tabloids.
首相可不受小报的待见。 - Hong Kong's tabloids frequently report on his lavish lifestyle and appearances with his girlfriends.
香港小报经常会报道刘銮雄的奢侈生活及其与女友外出的消息。 - You get nominated for a Pulitzer he ends up working for the tabloids.
你得到了普利策奖金提名,而他去给娱乐周刊工作。 - Reading tabloids, playing mah-jong or striving to be a learned man, the choice lies with you.
看小报呢,还是打麻将呢,还是努力做一个学者呢?全靠你们自己的选择! - For all their differences, tabloids in most rich countries have one common feature: shrinking circulation.
尽管他们存在这么多的不同,大多数富有国家的小报中存在着一个共同的特点:萎缩的发行量。 - The tabloids were covered with headlines suggesting that the actor was leading a double life.
各个小报的头条都是关于那个演员是如果过着双重生活的内容。 - Somebody's reading the tabloids.
看来还是有人读娱乐周刊的啊。 - Tabloids use yellow journalism to attract readers.
小报以黄色新闻编辑作风(:指不择手段地夸张、染以招揽或影响读者)吸引读者。 - Tabloids often have bigger pictures.
通俗小报上通常选用大幅照片。
