NEWSPAPER HEADLINES
Newspaper headlines are not always complete sentences:
1- Many headlines consist of noun phrases with no verb.
MORE POWER CUTS
TERROR ALERT IN CAPITAL
2- Articles and the verb be are often left out in headlines.
HUSSAIN
PAINTING OBSCENE, SAYS MINISTER
(The Hussain painting is obscene, says the Minister)
OLD MAN SCALES EVEREST
(An old man, has scaled Mt.
Everest)
FORMER PM PASSES AWAY
BLIND GIRL CLIMBS EVEREST
EARTH GETTING
WARMER, SAY SCIENTISTS
(Earth is getting warmer)
TRADE FIGURES IMPROVING
(Trade figures are improving)
5- Headlines often use infinitives to refer to the future.
PM TO VISIT CANADA
(The PM is going to visit Canada)
BUSINESS SCHOOLS TO TAKE MORE STUDENTS
(Business schools are going to take more students)
6- For is also
used to refer to future movements or plans.
(Are Indian soldiers going to be
sent to Iraq?)
(More tests are in store for students this year)
SIX PEOPLE KILLED IN EXPLOSION
INDIAN HELD FOR MURDER
Note that forms like held, found and attacked are usually past participles with passive meanings, not past tenses.
Compare:
(PM has been attacked because of
a nuclear deal fight.)
(PM has attacked his opposition
because of a nuclear deal fight)
A colon (:) is often used to separate the subject of a headline from what is said about it.
POWER CRISIS: GOVERNMENT TO ACT
(The Government is going to act over the power crisis)
BUILDING COLLAPSE: DEATH TOLL RISES
(The death toll from the building collapse has risen)
---------END OF LESSON 14 ----
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