Newspapers - Multiple Choice Test
Multiple Choice Test
Tabloids are
- smaller papers with sensational stories and headlines
- large format newspapers
- newspapers with text only
- weekly newspapers
Sunday newspapers
- have additional feature sections
- have fewer pages than daily newspapers
- are always prublished in broadsheet format
- do not have ads in them
Editorials
- present the editor's opinion
- only deal with international news
- give you a description of the person who wrote them
- are stories about people who have just died
The sports section is often
- in the back part of a newspaper
- on the front page
- left out of large-format papers
- in black and white
A stringer is a person who
- send stories to different news organisations
- only writes for one newspaper
- checks the spelling of an article
- reports on famous people
Many newspapers get their information from
- wire services
- kiosks
- newsagents
- editors
The deadline for early morning newspapers is usually
- late at night
- early in the morning
- in the afternoon
- before 7 p.m.
A circulation manager
- tries to increase the number of readers.
- makes sure newspapers are delivered as quickly as possible
- is responsible for the ad section
- is in control of newsagents
Classified ads
- only have a few lines
- only sell classified articles
- are large ads across the whole page
- are printed on the first few pages of a newspaper
Younger people
- get their information from various types of media
- only read tabloids
- subscribe to broadsheet newspapers
- only read print papers