Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Plural form of
byline .
Etymologies
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Examples
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Called simply Reuters, the 64-page, ad-free glossy, which was distributed to attendees of this year's World Economic Forum, is chock-full of all the big-name bylines Reuters has been giddily collecting over the past few years -- Chrystia Freeland, Bethany McLean, Sir Harold Evans, David Rohde, Jonathan Weber, to name just a few.
Yvette Kantrow: A Look at Reuters, the Magazine Yvette Kantrow 2012
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Print journalists can ask tough questions with fewer repercussions, because even hotshots of this stripe are still mostly known as bylines on a page.
CJR 2008
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And the bylines are a who's who of great thinkers, journalists, politicians and activists, including Bertrand Russell, Theodore Roosevelt, Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, union leader Walter Reuther, Theodore Dreiser (on what he saw as a "destructive phase" for American individualism circa 1932), Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.,
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I've made the "bylines" below the blog-posts hot, so that you can click 'em to send email.
Boing Boing: February 10, 2002 - February 16, 2002 Archives 2002
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There are about 35 data fields for each article, such as bylines, the section of the paper that the article appeared in, organization names and whether multimedia is associated with it.
Poynter Online 2009
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Their bylines are a testament to their own hard work and tangible proof of what can be accomplished when young people commit themselves to learning in a supportive environment. "
Madison.com - top 2008
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Consider this sampling ofTimes articles on the subject, along with the bylines:
Ali Gharib: What Did WikiLeaks Really Tell Us About Iran? Ali Gharib 2010
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Consider this sampling ofÂTimes articles on the subject, along with the bylines:
Ali Gharib: What Did WikiLeaks Really Tell Us About Iran? Ali Gharib 2010
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Consider this sampling ofTimes articles on the subject, along with the bylines:
Ali Gharib: What Did WikiLeaks Really Tell Us About Iran? Ali Gharib 2010
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If the New York Times wants to make such a move, but insists on maintaining that toney Manhattanite “feel” with a stable of famous reporter-auteurs with worshiped bylines, I suspect their brand will be seen as increasingly provincial.
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