byline 的 2 个定义
- a printed line of text accompanying a news story, article, or the like, giving the author's name.
by·lined, by·lin·ing.
- to accompany with a byline: Was the newspaper report bylined or was it anonymous?
更多byline例句
- If an assistant or staff member had, they would need to include them or be the byline.
- So, goes the theory, Fenn opted to end the hunt by hiring Stuef, a former journalist with bylines in Buzzfeed, New York Magazine, and The Onion, and tipping him off to the treasure’s location.
- The online equivalent of that would be to publish content without listing an author and including a byline with their credentials.
- Each of Forth’s contributors will be vetted by editors before they’re allowed to start posting — past bylines will play a role, cofounder Xana O’Neill said — and they are all required to adhere to editorial policies.
- Prior to the Summer Writers’ Challenge, Community contributors were awarded with “internet points” and “virtual trophies” for popular posts, which appear as a badge near the contributor’s byline on the page.
- Tracie Egan Morissey, who gets the byline for “Disney Dudes' Dicks,” slammed the “makeover.”
- He was egotistical even as a child, it is noted, infatuated with the sight of his name on a rubber stamp and later as a byline.
- Politico posted a condensed version of the brief, and I shared the byline with Ilya.
- An earlier version of this piece listed an incorrect byline.
- Her byline later appeared on a blog post about how people could apply in the new exchanges.
- Our newspaper ran an article by me or I got a byline on it stating this in general which I have stated today.
- If she proved herself competent, she would take over the column entirely and get the byline.
- You see, there was no byline on the story and they said, "Who wrote the story?"
- A byline meant that a caption directly under the headline would proclaim: “By Elda Hunt.”
- But as he gave the story to a copy reader who would write the headline, he said: “Give her a byline.”