
The headline is the text indicating the content or nature of the article below it, typically by providing a form of brief summary of its contents.
The large type front page headline did not come into use until the late 19th century when increased competition between newspapers led to the use of attention-getting headlines.
It is sometimes termed a news hed, a deliberate misspelling that dates from production flow during hot type days, to notify the composing room that a written note from an editor concerned a headline and should not be set in type.
Headlines in English often use a set of grammatical rules known as headlinese, designed to meet stringent space requirements by, for example, leaving out forms of the verb "to be" and choosing short verbs like "eye" over longer synonyms like "consider".
Production

A headline's purpose is to quickly and briefly draw attention to the story. It is generally written by a copy editor, but may also be written by the writer, the page layout designer, or other editors. The most important story on the front page above the fold may have a larger headline if the story is unusually important. The New York Times's 21 July 1969 front page stated, for example, that "MEN WALK ON MOON", with the four words in gigantic size spread from the left to right edges of the page.
In the United States, headline contests are sponsored by the American Copy Editors Society, the National Federation of Press Women, and many state press associations; some contests consider created content already published, others are for works written with winning in mind.
Typology
Research in 1980 classified newspaper headlines into four broad categories: questions, commands, statements, and explanations. Advertisers and marketers classify advertising headlines slightly differently into questions, commands, benefits, news/information, and provocation.
Research


A study indicates there has been a substantial increase of sentiment negativity and decrease of emotional neutrality in headlines across written popular U.S.-based news media since 2000.
Another study concluded that those who have gained the most experience with reading newspapers "spend most of their reading time scanning the headlines—rather than reading [all or most of] the stories".
Headlines can bias readers toward a specific interpretation and readers struggle to update their memory in order to correct initial misconceptions in the cases of misleading or inappropriate headlines.
One approach investigated as a potential countermeasure to online misinformation is "attaching warnings to headlines of news stories that have been disputed by third-party fact-checkers", albeit its potential problems include e.g. that false headlines that fail to get tagged are considered validated by readers.
Criticism
Sensationalism, inaccuracy and misleading headlines
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (December 2022) |
"Slam"
The use of "slam" in headlines has attracted criticism on the grounds that the word is overused and contributes to media sensationalism. The violent imagery of words like "slam", "blast", "rip", and "bash" has drawn comparison to professional wrestling, where the primary aim is to titillate audiences with a conflict-laden and largely predetermined narrative, rather than provide authentic coverage of spontaneous events.
Crash blossoms
"Crash blossoms" is a term used to describe headlines that have unintended ambiguous meanings, such as The Times headline "Hospitals named after sandwiches kill five". The word 'named' is typically used in headlines to mean "blamed/held accountable/named [in a lawsuit]", but in this example it seems to say that the hospitals' names were related to sandwiches. The headline was subsequently changed in the electronic version of the article. The term was coined in August 2009 on the Testy Copy Editors web forum after the Japan Times published an article entitled "Violinist Linked to JAL Crash Blossoms" (since retitled to "Violinist shirks off her tragic image").
Headlinese

Headlinese is an abbreviated form of news writing style used in newspaper headlines. Because space is limited, headlines are written in a compressed telegraphic style, using special syntactic conventions, including:
- Forms of the verb "to be" and articles (a, an, the) are usually omitted.
- Most verbs are in the simple present tense, e.g. "Governor signs bill", while the future is expressed by an infinitive, with to followed by a verb, as in "Governor to sign bill"
- The conjunction "and" is often replaced by a comma, as in "Bush, Blair laugh off microphone mishap".
- Individuals are usually specified by surname only, with no honorifics.
- Organizations and institutions are often indicated by metonymy: "Wall Street" for the US financial sector, "Whitehall" for the UK government administration, "Madrid" for the government of Spain, "Davos" for World Economic Forum, and so on.
- Many abbreviations, including contractions and acronyms, are used: in the UK, some examples are Lib Dems (for the Liberal Democrats), Tories (for the Conservative Party); in the US, Dems (for "Democrats") and GOP (for the Republican Party, from the nickname "Grand Old Party"). The period (full point) is usually omitted from these abbreviations, though U.S. may retain them, especially in all-caps headlines to avoid confusion with the word us.
- Lack of a terminating full stop (period) even if the headline forms a complete sentence.
- Use of single quotation marks to indicate a claim or allegation that cannot be presented as a fact. For example, an article titled "Ultra-processed foods 'linked to cancer'" covered a study which suggested a link but acknowledged that its findings were not definitive. Linguist Geoffrey K. Pullum characterizes this practice as deceptive, noting that the single-quoted expressions in newspaper headlines are often not actual quotations, and sometimes convey a claim that is not supported by the text of the article. Another technique is to present the claim as a question, hence Betteridge's law of headlines.
Some periodicals have their own distinctive headline styles, such as Variety and its entertainment-jargon headlines, most famously "Sticks Nix Hick Pix".
Commonly used short words
To save space and attract attention, headlines often use extremely short words, many of which are not otherwise in common use, in unusual or idiosyncratic ways:
- ace (a professional, especially a member of an elite sports team, e.g. "England ace")
- axe (to eliminate)
- bid (to attempt)
- blast (to heavily criticize)
- cagers (basketball team – "cage" is an old term for indoor court)
- chop (to eliminate)
- coffer(s) (a person or entity's financial holdings)
- confab (a meeting)[citation needed]
- eye (to consider)
- finger (to accuse, blame)
- fold (to shut down)
- gambit (an attempt)
- hail (to praise)
- hike (to increase, raise)
- ink (to sign a contract)
- jibe (an insult)
- laud (to praise)
- lull (a pause)
- mar (to damage, harm)
- mull (to contemplate)
- nab (to acquire, arrest)
- nix (to reject)
- parley (to discuss)
- pen (to write)
- probe (to investigate)
- rap (to criticize)
- romp (an easy victory or a sexual encounter)
- row (an argument or disagreement)
- rue (to lament)
- see (to forecast)
- slay (to murder)
- slam (to heavily criticize)
- slump (to decrease)
- snub (to reject)
- solon (to judge)
- spat (an argument or disagreement)
- star (a celebrity, often modified by another noun, e.g. "soap star")
- tap (to select, choose)
- tot (a child)
- tout (to put forward)
- woe (disappointment or misfortune)
Famous examples
Some famous headlines in periodicals include:
- WALL ST. LAYS AN EGG – Variety on Black Monday (1929)
- STICKS NIX HICK PIX – Variety writing that rural moviegoers preferred urban films (1935)
- DEWEY DEFEATS TRUMAN – Chicago Tribune reporting the wrong election winner (1948)
- FORD TO CITY: DROP DEAD – New York Daily News reporting the denial of a federal bailout for bankrupt New York City (1975)
- MUSH FROM THE WIMP – The Boston Globe in-house joke headline for an editorial, which was not changed before 161,000 copies had been printed. Theo Lippman Jr. of the Baltimore Sun declared "Mush from the Wimp" the second most famous newspaper headline of the 20th century, behind "Wall St. Lays an Egg" and ahead of "Ford to City: Drop Dead".
- HEADLESS BODY IN TOPLESS BAR – New York Post on a local murder (1983)
- SICK TRANSIT'S GLORIOUS MONDAY – New York Daily News front-page caption on a photo (1979) reporting an agreement to avoid fare increases on city transit services, making a multi-word pun on the Latin phrase Sic transit gloria mundi
- GOTCHA – The UK Sun on the torpedoing of the Argentine ship Belgrano and sinking of a gunboat during the Falklands War (1982)
- FREDDIE STARR ATE MY HAMSTER – The UK Sun (1986), claiming that the comedian had eaten a fan's pet hamster in a sandwich. The story was later proven false, but is seen as one of the classic tabloid newspaper headlines.
- GREAT SATAN SITS DOWN WITH THE AXIS OF EVIL – The Times (UK) on US–Iran talks (2007)
- SUPER CALEY GO BALLISTIC CELTIC ARE ATROCIOUS – Sun on Inverness Caledonian Thistle beating Celtic F.C. in the Scottish Cup; a pun on "Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious"
- WE ARE POPE (in German: Wir sind Papst); Bild after a German was voted to become Pope Benedict XVI in 2005.
The New Republic editor Michael Kinsley began a contest to find the most boring newspaper headline. According to him, no entry surpassed the one that had inspired him to create the contest: "WORTHWHILE CANADIAN INITIATIVE", over a column by The New York Times' Flora Lewis. In 2003, New York Magazine published a list of eleven "greatest tabloid headlines".
See also
- A-1 Headline, a 2004 Hong Kong film
- Betteridge's law of headlines – Journalistic adage on questions in headlines
- Bus plunge, a type of news story, and accompanying headline
- Copy editing
- Corporate jargon
- Crosswordese, words common in crosswords that are otherwise rarely used
- Dateline – Piece of news text
- Ellipsis (linguistics), omission of words
- Headlines (from The Tonight Show with Jay Leno)
- Lead paragraph
- Nut paragraph – In journalism, an opening paragraph providing context for the story
- Syntactic ambiguity, leads to multiple humorous possible alternative interpretations of written headline
- Title (publishing) – Name of a published text or work of art
References
- NY Times: On Language: HED
- Wilford, John Noble (14 July 2009). "On Hand for Space History, as Superpowers Spar". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 April 2011.
- "Headline Contest".
- A NYTimes contest to write a NYPost-style headline"After Winning N.Y. Times Contest". The New York Times. November 11, 2011.
- Davis & Brewer 1997, p. 56.
- Arens 1996, p. 285.
- Rozado, David; Hughes, Ruth; Halberstadt, Jamin (18 October 2022). "Longitudinal analysis of sentiment and emotion in news media headlines using automated labelling with Transformer language models". PLOS ONE. 17 (10): e0276367. Bibcode:2022PLoSO..1776367R. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0276367. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 9578611. PMID 36256658.
- Brooks, David (27 October 2022). "Opinion | The Rising Tide of Global Sadness". The New York Times. Retrieved 21 November 2022.
- Dor, Daniel (May 2003). "On newspaper headlines as relevance optimizers". Journal of Pragmatics. 35 (5): 695–721. doi:10.1016/S0378-2166(02)00134-0. S2CID 8394655.
- Ecker, Ullrich K. H.; Lewandowsky, Stephan; Chang, Ee Pin; Pillai, Rekha (December 2014). "The effects of subtle misinformation in news headlines". Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied. 20 (4): 323–335. doi:10.1037/xap0000028. PMID 25347407.
- Pennycook, Gordon; Bear, Adam; Collins, Evan T.; Rand, David G. (November 2020). "The Implied Truth Effect: Attaching Warnings to a Subset of Fake News Headlines Increases Perceived Accuracy of Headlines Without Warnings". Management Science. 66 (11): 4944–4957. doi:10.1287/mnsc.2019.3478.
- Ann-Derrick Gaillot (2018-07-28). "The Outline "slams" media for overusing the word". The Outline. Retrieved 2020-02-24.
- Kehe, Jason (9 September 2009). "Colloquialism slams language". Daily Trojan.
- Russell, Michael (8 October 2019). "Biden 'Rips' Trump, Yankees 'Bash' Twins: Is Anyone Going to 'Slam' the Press?". PolitiChicks.
- Pérez, Isabel. "Newspaper Headlines". English as a Second or Foreign Language. Retrieved 31 March 2020.
- Brown, David (18 June 2019). "Hospital trusts named after sandwiches kill five". The Times. Retrieved 31 March 2020.
- Zimmer, Ben (Jan 31, 2010). "Crash Blossoms". New York Times Magazine. Retrieved 31 March 2020.
- subtle_body; danbloom; Nessie3. "What's a crash blossom?". Testy Copy Editors. Retrieved 31 March 2020.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - Masangkay, May (18 August 2009). "Violinist shirks off her tragic image". The Japan Times. Retrieved 31 March 2020.
- Headlinese Collated definitions via www.wordnik.com
- Isabel Perez.com: "Newspaper Headlines"
- "Bush, Blair laugh off microphone mishap". CNN. July 21, 2006. Archived from the original on August 16, 2007. Retrieved July 17, 2007.
- Pack, Mark (2020). Bad News: What the Headlines Don't Tell Us. Biteback. p. 100-102.
- "Ultra-processed foods 'linked to cancer'". BBC News. 2018-02-15. Retrieved 2021-02-26.
- Pullum, Geoffrey (2009-01-14). "Mendacity quotes". Language Log. Retrieved 2021-02-26.
- "The Secrets You Learn Working at Celebrity Gossip Magazines". 2018-09-12. Retrieved 2021-02-26.
- Chad Pollitt (March 5, 2019). "Which Types of Headlines Drive the Most Content Engagement Post-Click?". Social Media Today.
- "19 Headline Writing Tips for More Clickable Blog Posts". August 27, 2019.
- Ash Read (August 24, 2016). "There's No Perfect Headline: Why We Need to Write Multiple Headlines for Every Article".
- "When the Court was a Cage", Sports Illustrated
- Scharfenberg, Kirk (1982-11-06). "Now It Can Be Told . . . The Story Behind Campaign '82's Favorite Insult". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. p. 1. Archived from the original on 2011-05-23. Retrieved 2011-01-20.(subscription required)
- Fox, Margalit (2016-06-09). "Vincent Musetto, 74, Dies; Wrote 'Headless' Headline of Ageless Fame". The New York Times.
- Daily News (New York), 9/25/1979, p. 1
- "Telegraph wins newspaper vote". BBC News. 25 May 2006.
- Great Satan sits down with the Axis of Evil[dead link ]
- "Super Caley dream realistic?". BBC. 22 March 2003.
- Kinsley, Michael (1986-06-02). "Don't Stop The Press". The New Republic. Retrieved April 26, 2011.
- Lewis, Flora (4 October 1986). "Worthwhile Canadian Initiative". The New York Times. Retrieved 9 March 2013.
- Kinsley, Michael (28 July 2010). "Boring Article Contest". The Atlantic. Retrieved 26 April 2011.
- "Greatest Tabloid Headlines". Nymag.com. March 31, 2003. Archived from the original on January 22, 2009. Retrieved February 11, 2009.
Works cited
- Arens, William F. (1996). Contemporary Advertising. Irwin. ISBN 978-0-256-18257-6.
- Davis, Boyd H.; Brewer, Jeutonne (1 January 1997). Electronic Discourse: Linguistic Individuals in Virtual Space. SUNY Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-3475-8.
Further reading
- Harold Evans (1974). News Headlines (Editing and Design : Book Three) Butterworth-Heinemann Ltd. ISBN 978-0-434-90552-2
- Fritz Spiegl (1966). What The Papers Didn't Mean to Say. Scouse Press, Liverpool ISBN 0901367028
- Mårdh, Ingrid (1980); Headlinese: On the Grammar of English Front Page headlines; "Lund studies in English" series; Lund, Sweden: Liberläromedel/Gleerup; ISBN 91-40-04753-9
- Biber, D. (2007); "Compressed noun phrase structures in newspaper discourse: The competing demands of popularization vs. economy"; in W. Teubert and R. Krishnamurthy (eds.); Corpus linguistics: Critical concepts in linguistics; vol. V, pp. 130–141; London: Routledge
External links

- Front Page – The British Library Archived 2017-07-22 at the Wayback Machine Exhibition of famous newspaper headlines
wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library, article, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games, mobile, phone, android, ios, apple, mobile phone, samsung, iphone, xiomi, xiaomi, redmi, honor, oppo, nokia, sonya, mi, pc, web, computer
The headline is the text indicating the content or nature of the article below it typically by providing a form of brief summary of its contents The large type front page headline did not come into use until the late 19th century when increased competition between newspapers led to the use of attention getting headlines It is sometimes termed a news hed a deliberate misspelling that dates from production flow during hot type days to notify the composing room that a written note from an editor concerned a headline and should not be set in type Headlines in English often use a set of grammatical rules known as headlinese designed to meet stringent space requirements by for example leaving out forms of the verb to be and choosing short verbs like eye over longer synonyms like consider ProductionThe New York Times uses an unusually large headline to announce the Armistice with Germany at the end of World War I A headline s purpose is to quickly and briefly draw attention to the story It is generally written by a copy editor but may also be written by the writer the page layout designer or other editors The most important story on the front page above the fold may have a larger headline if the story is unusually important The New York Times s 21 July 1969 front page stated for example that MEN WALK ON MOON with the four words in gigantic size spread from the left to right edges of the page In the United States headline contests are sponsored by the American Copy Editors Society the National Federation of Press Women and many state press associations some contests consider created content already published others are for works written with winning in mind TypologyResearch in 1980 classified newspaper headlines into four broad categories questions commands statements and explanations Advertisers and marketers classify advertising headlines slightly differently into questions commands benefits news information and provocation ResearchEmotionality in news articles headlines since 2000Average yearly sentiment of headlines across 47 popular news media outlets A study indicates there has been a substantial increase of sentiment negativity and decrease of emotional neutrality in headlines across written popular U S based news media since 2000 Another study concluded that those who have gained the most experience with reading newspapers spend most of their reading time scanning the headlines rather than reading all or most of the stories Headlines can bias readers toward a specific interpretation and readers struggle to update their memory in order to correct initial misconceptions in the cases of misleading or inappropriate headlines One approach investigated as a potential countermeasure to online misinformation is attaching warnings to headlines of news stories that have been disputed by third party fact checkers albeit its potential problems include e g that false headlines that fail to get tagged are considered validated by readers CriticismSensationalism inaccuracy and misleading headlines This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2022 Slam The use of slam in headlines has attracted criticism on the grounds that the word is overused and contributes to media sensationalism The violent imagery of words like slam blast rip and bash has drawn comparison to professional wrestling where the primary aim is to titillate audiences with a conflict laden and largely predetermined narrative rather than provide authentic coverage of spontaneous events Crash blossoms Crash blossoms is a term used to describe headlines that have unintended ambiguous meanings such as The Times headline Hospitals named after sandwiches kill five The word named is typically used in headlines to mean blamed held accountable named in a lawsuit but in this example it seems to say that the hospitals names were related to sandwiches The headline was subsequently changed in the electronic version of the article The term was coined in August 2009 on the Testy Copy Editors web forum after the Japan Times published an article entitled Violinist Linked to JAL Crash Blossoms since retitled to Violinist shirks off her tragic image HeadlineseHeadlinese has a long history This example is the front page of the Los Angeles Herald issue of May 29 1916 Headlinese is an abbreviated form of news writing style used in newspaper headlines Because space is limited headlines are written in a compressed telegraphic style using special syntactic conventions including Forms of the verb to be and articles a an the are usually omitted Most verbs are in the simple present tense e g Governor signs bill while the future is expressed by an infinitive with to followed by a verb as in Governor to sign bill The conjunction and is often replaced by a comma as in Bush Blair laugh off microphone mishap Individuals are usually specified by surname only with no honorifics Organizations and institutions are often indicated by metonymy Wall Street for the US financial sector Whitehall for the UK government administration Madrid for the government of Spain Davos for World Economic Forum and so on Many abbreviations including contractions and acronyms are used in the UK some examples are Lib Dems for the Liberal Democrats Tories for the Conservative Party in the US Dems for Democrats and GOP for the Republican Party from the nickname Grand Old Party The period full point is usually omitted from these abbreviations though U S may retain them especially in all caps headlines to avoid confusion with the word us Lack of a terminating full stop period even if the headline forms a complete sentence Use of single quotation marks to indicate a claim or allegation that cannot be presented as a fact For example an article titled Ultra processed foods linked to cancer covered a study which suggested a link but acknowledged that its findings were not definitive Linguist Geoffrey K Pullum characterizes this practice as deceptive noting that the single quoted expressions in newspaper headlines are often not actual quotations and sometimes convey a claim that is not supported by the text of the article Another technique is to present the claim as a question hence Betteridge s law of headlines Some periodicals have their own distinctive headline styles such as Variety and its entertainment jargon headlines most famously Sticks Nix Hick Pix Commonly used short words To save space and attract attention headlines often use extremely short words many of which are not otherwise in common use in unusual or idiosyncratic ways ace a professional especially a member of an elite sports team e g England ace axe to eliminate bid to attempt blast to heavily criticize cagers basketball team cage is an old term for indoor court chop to eliminate coffer s a person or entity s financial holdings confab a meeting citation needed eye to consider finger to accuse blame fold to shut down gambit an attempt hail to praise hike to increase raise ink to sign a contract jibe an insult laud to praise lull a pause mar to damage harm mull to contemplate nab to acquire arrest nix to reject parley to discuss pen to write probe to investigate rap to criticize romp an easy victory or a sexual encounter row an argument or disagreement rue to lament see to forecast slay to murder slam to heavily criticize slump to decrease snub to reject solon to judge spat an argument or disagreement star a celebrity often modified by another noun e g soap star tap to select choose tot a child tout to put forward woe disappointment or misfortune Famous examplesSome famous headlines in periodicals include WALL ST LAYS AN EGG Variety on Black Monday 1929 STICKS NIX HICK PIX Variety writing that rural moviegoers preferred urban films 1935 DEWEY DEFEATS TRUMAN Chicago Tribune reporting the wrong election winner 1948 FORD TO CITY DROP DEAD New York Daily News reporting the denial of a federal bailout for bankrupt New York City 1975 MUSH FROM THE WIMP The Boston Globe in house joke headline for an editorial which was not changed before 161 000 copies had been printed Theo Lippman Jr of the Baltimore Sun declared Mush from the Wimp the second most famous newspaper headline of the 20th century behind Wall St Lays an Egg and ahead of Ford to City Drop Dead HEADLESS BODY IN TOPLESS BAR New York Post on a local murder 1983 SICK TRANSIT S GLORIOUS MONDAY New York Daily News front page caption on a photo 1979 reporting an agreement to avoid fare increases on city transit services making a multi word pun on the Latin phrase Sic transit gloria mundi GOTCHA The UK Sun on the torpedoing of the Argentine ship Belgrano and sinking of a gunboat during the Falklands War 1982 FREDDIE STARR ATE MY HAMSTER The UK Sun 1986 claiming that the comedian had eaten a fan s pet hamster in a sandwich The story was later proven false but is seen as one of the classic tabloid newspaper headlines GREAT SATAN SITS DOWN WITH THE AXIS OF EVIL The Times UK on US Iran talks 2007 SUPER CALEY GO BALLISTIC CELTIC ARE ATROCIOUS Sun on Inverness Caledonian Thistle beating Celtic F C in the Scottish Cup a pun on Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious WE ARE POPE in German Wir sind Papst Bild after a German was voted to become Pope Benedict XVI in 2005 The New Republic editor Michael Kinsley began a contest to find the most boring newspaper headline According to him no entry surpassed the one that had inspired him to create the contest WORTHWHILE CANADIAN INITIATIVE over a column by The New York Times Flora Lewis In 2003 New York Magazine published a list of eleven greatest tabloid headlines See alsoA 1 Headline a 2004 Hong Kong film Betteridge s law of headlines Journalistic adage on questions in headlines Bus plunge a type of news story and accompanying headline Copy editing Corporate jargon Crosswordese words common in crosswords that are otherwise rarely used Dateline Piece of news text Ellipsis linguistics omission of words Headlines from The Tonight Show with Jay Leno Lead paragraph Nut paragraph In journalism an opening paragraph providing context for the storyPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Syntactic ambiguity leads to multiple humorous possible alternative interpretations of written headline Title publishing Name of a published text or work of artReferencesNY Times On Language HED Wilford John Noble 14 July 2009 On Hand for Space History as Superpowers Spar The New York Times Retrieved 24 April 2011 Headline Contest A NYTimes contest to write a NYPost style headline After Winning N Y Times Contest The New York Times November 11 2011 Davis amp Brewer 1997 p 56 Arens 1996 p 285 Rozado David Hughes Ruth Halberstadt Jamin 18 October 2022 Longitudinal analysis of sentiment and emotion in news media headlines using automated labelling with Transformer language models PLOS ONE 17 10 e0276367 Bibcode 2022PLoSO 1776367R doi 10 1371 journal pone 0276367 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 9578611 PMID 36256658 Brooks David 27 October 2022 Opinion The Rising Tide of Global Sadness The New York Times Retrieved 21 November 2022 Dor Daniel May 2003 On newspaper headlines as relevance optimizers Journal of Pragmatics 35 5 695 721 doi 10 1016 S0378 2166 02 00134 0 S2CID 8394655 Ecker Ullrich K H Lewandowsky Stephan Chang Ee Pin Pillai Rekha December 2014 The effects of subtle misinformation in news headlines Journal of Experimental Psychology Applied 20 4 323 335 doi 10 1037 xap0000028 PMID 25347407 Pennycook Gordon Bear Adam Collins Evan T Rand David G November 2020 The Implied Truth Effect Attaching Warnings to a Subset of Fake News Headlines Increases Perceived Accuracy of Headlines Without Warnings Management Science 66 11 4944 4957 doi 10 1287 mnsc 2019 3478 Ann Derrick Gaillot 2018 07 28 The Outline slams media for overusing the word The Outline Retrieved 2020 02 24 Kehe Jason 9 September 2009 Colloquialism slams language Daily Trojan Russell Michael 8 October 2019 Biden Rips Trump Yankees Bash Twins Is Anyone Going to Slam the Press PolitiChicks Perez Isabel Newspaper Headlines English as a Second or Foreign Language Retrieved 31 March 2020 Brown David 18 June 2019 Hospital trusts named after sandwiches kill five The Times Retrieved 31 March 2020 Zimmer Ben Jan 31 2010 Crash Blossoms New York Times Magazine Retrieved 31 March 2020 subtle body danbloom Nessie3 What s a crash blossom Testy Copy Editors Retrieved 31 March 2020 a href wiki Template Cite web title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Masangkay May 18 August 2009 Violinist shirks off her tragic image The Japan Times Retrieved 31 March 2020 Headlinese Collated definitions via www wordnik com Isabel Perez com Newspaper Headlines Bush Blair laugh off microphone mishap CNN July 21 2006 Archived from the original on August 16 2007 Retrieved July 17 2007 Pack Mark 2020 Bad News What the Headlines Don t Tell Us Biteback p 100 102 Ultra processed foods linked to cancer BBC News 2018 02 15 Retrieved 2021 02 26 Pullum Geoffrey 2009 01 14 Mendacity quotes Language Log Retrieved 2021 02 26 The Secrets You Learn Working at Celebrity Gossip Magazines 2018 09 12 Retrieved 2021 02 26 Chad Pollitt March 5 2019 Which Types of Headlines Drive the Most Content Engagement Post Click Social Media Today 19 Headline Writing Tips for More Clickable Blog Posts August 27 2019 Ash Read August 24 2016 There s No Perfect Headline Why We Need to Write Multiple Headlines for Every Article When the Court was a Cage Sports Illustrated Scharfenberg Kirk 1982 11 06 Now It Can Be Told The Story Behind Campaign 82 s Favorite Insult The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts p 1 Archived from the original on 2011 05 23 Retrieved 2011 01 20 subscription required Fox Margalit 2016 06 09 Vincent Musetto 74 Dies Wrote Headless Headline of Ageless Fame The New York Times Daily News New York 9 25 1979 p 1 Telegraph wins newspaper vote BBC News 25 May 2006 Great Satan sits down with the Axis of Evil dead link Super Caley dream realistic BBC 22 March 2003 Kinsley Michael 1986 06 02 Don t Stop The Press The New Republic Retrieved April 26 2011 Lewis Flora 4 October 1986 Worthwhile Canadian Initiative The New York Times Retrieved 9 March 2013 Kinsley Michael 28 July 2010 Boring Article Contest The Atlantic Retrieved 26 April 2011 Greatest Tabloid Headlines Nymag com March 31 2003 Archived from the original on January 22 2009 Retrieved February 11 2009 Works cited Arens William F 1996 Contemporary Advertising Irwin ISBN 978 0 256 18257 6 Davis Boyd H Brewer Jeutonne 1 January 1997 Electronic Discourse Linguistic Individuals in Virtual Space SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 3475 8 Further readingHarold Evans 1974 News Headlines Editing and Design Book Three Butterworth Heinemann Ltd ISBN 978 0 434 90552 2 Fritz Spiegl 1966 What The Papers Didn t Mean to Say Scouse Press Liverpool ISBN 0901367028 Mardh Ingrid 1980 Headlinese On the Grammar of English Front Page headlines Lund studies in English series Lund Sweden Liberlaromedel Gleerup ISBN 91 40 04753 9 Biber D 2007 Compressed noun phrase structures in newspaper discourse The competing demands of popularization vs economy in W Teubert and R Krishnamurthy eds Corpus linguistics Critical concepts in linguistics vol V pp 130 141 London RoutledgeExternal linksLook up headline in Wiktionary the free dictionary Front Page The British Library Archived 2017 07 22 at the Wayback Machine Exhibition of famous newspaper headlines