How to use in-sentence of “tabloid”:
+ So, is it a broadsheet or a tacky tabloid rag? You can decide.
+ Sometimes tabloid journalism is also for women.
+ Joseph Medill Patterson went onto create a newspaper of the same name in 1919, it was America’s first official tabloid journal.
+ Eriksson stepped down from his most recent position as the England national football teamEnglish national team manager following England’s exit from the 2006 World Cup; there was, however, considerable speculation that he was forced out by the English football authorities due to his tenure being punctuated by well-documented tabloid reports of his private life.
+ During the show, she had sex on live TV, making her an instant tabloid celebrity.
+ The name of the conflict may be derived from a pun on the term “Cold War possibly via the British tabloid press.
Example sentences of “tabloid”:
+ It features a panel of women who talk about current issues and news items such as tabloid headlines and celebrity news.
+ The "Mirrors mass working-class readership had made it the United Kingdom's best-selling daily tabloid newspaper.
+ It features a panel of women who talk about current issues and news items such as tabloid headlines and celebrity news.
+ The “Mirrors mass working-class readership had made it the United Kingdom’s best-selling daily tabloid newspaper.
+ Originally a broadsheet newspaper, it became a tabloid in 2006.
+ It has the second most readers in Germany after the tabloid newspaper Bild-Zeitung.
+ The Sun is a tabloid daily newspaper published in the United Kingdom and Ireland.
+ The “Daily News” of New York City is a daily tabloid newspaper.
+ On February 1, 2005, the free daily Tabloid tabloid “Washington Examiner” debuted, having been formed from a chain of suburban newspapers known as the “Journal Newspapers”.
+ Many tabloid newspapers use a photo of a topless or a naked girl to improve their sales.
+ He hosts the tabloid talk show “Maury”.
+ The “Namibian Sun” is a daily tabloid and print newspaper in Namibia.
+ They then sell these pictures to media outlets or tabloid newspapers.
+ The “Birmingham Mail” tabloid newspaper based in Birmingham, England.
+ He was the original presenter of the BBC satirical panel game show, “Have I Got News for You.” He was fired from the show in October 2002, after more negative tabloid articles about his personal life.
+ The “Daily Star” is a tabloid newspaper in the United Kingdom.