Online Google Dictionary

bylines 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Noun
/ˈbīˌlīn/,
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bylines, plural;
  1. A line in a newspaper naming the writer of an article


  1. The byline on a newspaper or magazine article gives the name, and often the position, of the writer of the article. ...
  2. (Byline (soccer)) An association football pitch (also known as a football pitch, football field or soccer field) is the playing surface for the game of association football made of turf. Its dimensions and markings are defined by Law 1 of the Laws of the Game, "The Field of Play".
  3. (byline) A line at the head of a newspaper or magazine article carrying the writer's name; A touchline
  4. (Byline) in newsletter/magazine layout, a credit line for the author of an article.
  5. (Byline) the markings on the shortest side of the pitch, which run from the posts to the corners. Also known as the End line.^[42]
  6. (Byline) Author’s name appearing with his or her published work.
  7. The byline identifies the name of the journalist or author of a piece of editorial and is placed just under the headline. If someone’s writing about your company it’s good to know who it is. (Especially if the coverage is unfavourable!)
  8. (Byline) The author's name, which is printed at the beginning of an article.
  9. A byline is the term given to the short piece of text that identifies and describes the author or journalist of an article. It generally comes after the heading, or at the end of an article.
  10. (Byline) The name of a writer or photographer printed with a magazine or newspaper article
  11. (Byline) The name of the writer printed at the top of a story.
  12. (By-line) Carried on a story, to identify who wrote it
  13. (By-Line) When I 'ghost' an article on behalf of a client, the client is identified in the journal as the author. "By John Doe" (By-line, get it?)
  14. (By-line) Sentence or line that provides the author's name to accompany a story.
  15. (By-line) the use of the journalists name on a newspaper article or report.
  16. (Byline) A line giving credit to the crossword constructor in a published crossword. For many constructors, seeing your name in print in a respected crossword publication is far more important than the small monetary reward you receive. Despite this fact, not all editors publish a byline.
  17. (Byline) Author’s credit in magazines and newspapers.
  18. (Byline) Most magazines publish an author’s name with his article or story or poem, and in some small publications, this may be his only “payment.” . . . Bylines are generally not given for research work, although the writer may receive contributor credit.
  19. (Byline) The author's name. Usually printed in a smaller or italic font just below the headline.
  20. (Byline) Usually accompanies an article and is one-two lines about the author.
  21. (Byline) the writers name, sometimes includes a sentence or two about the author in the 3rd person.
  22. (by-line) character string enclosed in quotes or character variable name; gives another line of description for the graph. The byline appears under the titles on the graph. DSGI does not provide a default byline.
  23. (by-line) what we Americans normally refer to as the goal line. The end line at each end of the field that the goals are lined up on.
  24. (byline) Credit given to the writer of the text (e.g. by John Smith).a
  25. (byline) Line in a publication that identifies the writer.