tabloid
形容词(Adjective): 1. 小报的,通俗的(指文章内容浅显、文字简短的报纸) - relating to or characteristic of a tabloid newspaper, typically having sensational or exaggerated stories. - Example: The tabloid press often focuses on celebrity gossip and scandalous stories.小报通常关注名人八卦和丑闻故事。 2. 便携式的,袖珍的 - compact in size or form, typically for convenience or portability. - Example: I prefer tabloid-sized newspapers because they are easier to carry and read.
我喜欢小报尺寸的报纸,因为携带和阅读更加方便。 名词(Noun): 1. 小报,通俗报纸 - a newspaper having pages half the size of those of a standard newspaper, typically popular in style and dominated by headlines, photographs, and sensational stories. - Example: The tabloid featured a scandalous headline about the famous actor's secret affair.
该小报刊登了一篇关于这位著名演员秘密恋情的耸人标题。 2. 药片,药片剂 - a small medicinal tablet. - Example: The doctor prescribed two tabloids to be taken with water after meals.
医生开了两片药片,饭后用水吞服。
词语辨析(Different Meanings):
- 小报(tabloid newspaper)和大报(broadsheet newspaper)是两种不同类型的报纸,前者通常以简短、轻松、轰动的方式呈现新闻,而后者则更加正式、详细。 - 药片(tabloid)是一种口服药物的形式,通常较小且易于吞咽。词汇扩充(Vocabulary Expansion):
- scandalous: 丑闻的,耸人听闻的 - sensational: 轰动的,耸人听闻的 - headline: 头条新闻 - photographs: 照片 - affair: 事情,事件 - medicinal: 药用的 - tablet: 药片剂近义词(Synonyms):
- sensationalist - popular press - yellow journalism反义词(Antonyms):
- broadsheet - serious press柯林斯词典(Collins Dictionary):
名词(Noun): 1. A tabloid is a newspaper that has small pages, short articles, and a lot of photographs.小报:具有小的版面、短的文章和大量照片的报纸。 2. Tabloid is used to describe something that is typical of the popular press, especially when you disapprove of it because you think it is exaggerated or not serious.
小报的:用于形容通俗报纸的,尤其是指那些你认为夸大其词或不严肃的报纸。 形容词(Adjective): Tabloid is used to describe things that are small in size, especially when they are smaller than other things of the same kind.
袖珍的:用于描述尺寸小的事物,尤其是指比同类事物更小的事物。
牛津词典(Oxford Dictionary):
名词(Noun): 1. A newspaper having pages half the size of those of the average broadsheet, typically popular in style and dominated by headlines, photographs, and sensational stories.小报:具有与普通大报版面一半大小的报纸,通常风格受欢迎,并以头条新闻、照片和耸人听闻的故事为主导。 2. A newspaper of this kind noted for its sensationalism.
小报:以其轰动性而闻名的报纸。 形容词(Adjective): 1. Of or denoting a tabloid newspaper or its style.
小报的:指小报或其风格。 2. (Of a newspaper) small in size, typically half the size of a standard or broadsheet newspaper.
小报尺寸的:指报纸尺寸小,通常是标准或大报的一半大小。
用法(Usage):
- The tabloid newspaper published scandalous stories about celebrities.这家小报刊登了关于名人的丑闻报道。 - The article was written in a tabloid style, with catchy headlines and sensational content.
这篇文章以小报风格写成,有吸引人的标题和耸人听闻的内容。 - She always carries a tabloid magazine in her bag to read during her commute.
她总是随身携带一本小报杂志,在上下班途中阅读。 - The doctor prescribed a tabloid for the patient to take daily.
医生开了一种要求病人每天服用的药片。 - The tabloid contained a series of shocking revelations about the politician's personal life.
该小报刊登了一系列关于政治家个人生活的令人震惊的爆料。 - I find the content of most tabloids to be sensationalized and lacking in depth.
我觉得大多数小报的内容都被夸大其词,缺乏深度。 - The tabloid coverage of the event exaggerated the facts and focused on scandal rather than substance.
该事件的小报报道夸大了事实,关注的是丑闻而非实质性内容。 - The tabloid-sized booklet was easy to carry and read on the train.
小报尺寸的小册子在火车上携带和阅读很方便。 - The tabloid newspaper was filled with gossip and celebrity news.
小报上满是八卦和名人新闻。