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Перевод: tabloid
[прилагательное] сжатый; бульварный; низкопробный; [существительное] таблетка ; малоформатная газета; бульварная газета; краткий обзор; конспект ; резюме [существительное]
Тезаурус:
- "Randy Maths Master in Schoolgirl Sex Romps" is a hardly tabloid perennial.
- They seem to run the gamut from what you might call the "tabloid television" of Top of the Pops and The Hit Man and Her , via the "serious" "quality" programmes like Rock Steady or Big World Caf , to the more lefty "alternative" programmes, of which The Tube was the prototype, like Channel 4's Club X .
- It was no accident that when Pottz won the world title one of the tabloid headlines in England ran: "Britannia Rules the Waves".
- Souness has just heard that the SFA have banned him from sitting at the touchline for the remainder of the season, and yet again the tabloid press has pushed his tolerance beyond the limit.
- All contemporary hues, every scrap of modern dialogue, every present mood, every tabloid headline, every bell clanging across the meadow tells us this.
- She's talking about her film Ghost , and US tabloid reports claiming that husband Bruce Willis showed up on the day of her crucial love scene with Patrick Swayze wielding a baseball bat.
- The author is a past mistress of gushing praise to lull the reader into tabloid deification, then the quiet slipping in of neat doses of vitriol to tarnish her subject and titillate us.
- The Thatcher administration felt the behaviour of the tabloid press in invading people's privacy was one such matter - although their behaviour outraged all civilized standards, the worst offending newspapers were owned by political sympathizers like Rupert Murdoch.
- Bored with the custom of the bishop's Easter letter, Hope has replaced it with a tabloid, just out.
- And few would disagree that, given the fanaticism and sheer ferocity of tabloid prejudice, it would be unreasonable for gay people to expect that Labour should adopt our cause as an election issue.
- It's a much more exciting and lively place and more relaxed than you could ever possible imagine if you read certain tabloid newspapers."
- In both the 1983 and 1987 general elections the government had strong press support, with only the erratic Maxwell-owned tabloid, the Daily Mirror , to support Labour, along with the Alliance-inclined Guardian and the Observer on Sundays.
- Satellite television stations under the control of press barons and modelled on the tabloid press may make inaction even more indefensible.
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