FRONT-PAGE


Meaning of FRONT-PAGE in English

adjective

COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES

a front-page article

The protest followed a front-page article in the Herald three weeks ago.

a front-page headline

The newspaper's front-page headline read simply 'Prime Minister resigns'.

a front-page story

The Times published a front-page story about the scandal.

COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS

■ NOUN

article

On March 16, a front-page article in the Transcript reported that an explosion on the seal steamer Viking had killed twenty-five.

news

If she knew that each of these unhappy events would be international front-page news she would be even more upset.

Soon, the desegregation of education became front-page news again and forced the Kennedy administration to respond with force.

The media besiege him, and his views are front-page news .

If even one of the cited companies faltered, even though it might later spring back, it became front-page news .

The war was no longer front-page news .

It became the stuff of front-page news .

It must have made front-page news .

Her presence was enough to make front-page news .

story

A front-page story about the Owens letter also was published.

Connections' inaugural issue featured a front-page story by Scott Forman about growing up feeling different and excluded in a sighted world.

EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS

If even one of the cited companies faltered, even though it might later spring back, it became front-page news.

If she knew that each of these unhappy events would be international front-page news she would be even more upset.

Soon, the desegregation of education became front-page news again and forced the Kennedy administration to respond with force.

The war was no longer front-page news.

Longman DOCE5 Extras English vocabulary.      Дополнительный английский словарь Longman DOCE5.