Headlinese
Headlinese is an abbreviated writing style used in newspaper headlines.[1] 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 are usually omitted.
- Most verbs are in the simple present tense, e.g. "Governor signs bill", while the future is expressed as "to" followed by a verb, e.g. "Governor to sign bill".
- In the US (but not the UK), conjunctions are often replaced by a comma, as in "Bush, Blair laugh off microphone mishap".[2]
- Country names are often used instead of their adjective form, e.g. "Russia fires warning shot at Turkey boat".[3]
- Individuals are usually named by their last name only, with no honorifics.
- Organizations and institutions are often named by metonymy: "Wall Street" for "the financial industry", "Whitehall" for the UK government administration, "Madrid" for "the government of Spain", "Davos" for "World Economic Forum", and so on.
- Use of many contractions and abbreviations: in the USA, for example, Dems (for "Democrats") and GOP (for the Republican Party, from the nickname "Grand Old Party"); in the UK, Lib Dems (for the Liberal Democrats), Tories (for the Conservative Party).
Some periodicals have their own distinctive headline styles, such Variety and its entertainment-jargon headlines, most famously "Sticks Nix Hick Pix".
Commonly used short words
To save space, headlines often use extremely short words (many of which are not in common use otherwise) in unusual or idiosyncratic ways:
- axe (eliminate)
- amid (at the same time as)
- bid (attempt)
- blast (heavily criticize)
- chop (eliminate)
- confab (meeting)
- curb (reduce)
- duo (two people)
- eye (consider)
- foe
- fold (shut down)
- fury
- gal
- guy
- hike (increase)
- hit
- hype
- ink (sign a contract)
- laud (praise)
- lull
- mar
- mull (consider)
- nab
- nix (reject)
- parley (meeting)
- pen (write)
- pose
- probe (investigate)
- quiz (question)
- rap (criticize)
- revel
- rout
- see (forecast)
- slam (heavily criticize)
- stun
- temblor (earthquake)
- tout (endorse)
- vie (compete)
- vow (promise)
- woe (problem)
Many verbs can be converted into nouns, e.g. "rap" could be understood as either "criticize" or "criticism" depending on context.
See also
- Copy editing
- Corporate jargon
- Ellipsis, omission of words
- Syntactic ambiguity ยง In headlines
- Journalese
References
- โ Headlinese Collated definitions via www.wordnik.com
- โ "Bush, Blair laugh off microphone mishap". CNN. 2006-07-21. Archived from the original on 2007-08-16. Retrieved 2007-07-17.
- โ http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-35087050
Further reading
- Headlinese : on the grammar of English front page headlines, Ingrid Mard, ISBN 91-40-04753-9 (pbk.), Lund studies in English
- 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), 130-141. London: Routledge.
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