Dateline vs Gateline - What's the difference?
dateline | gateline |
(journalism) A line at the beginning of a document (such as a newspaper article) stating the date and place of origin.
To attach a to a particular document
* {{quote-book, 1993, Joel Williamson, William Faulkner and Southern History
, passage=He datelined the entry: "Oxford Mississippi, 27 January, 1926."}}
A row of turnstiles allowing railway passengers to enter or exit on inserting a ticket.
* 1993 , Great Britain. Dept. of Transport, Railway safety
* 2006 , Great Britain: Parliament: House of Commons: Transport Committee, Personal Passenger Safety in Railway Stations (page 16)
* 2010 , Stephanie Smith, Underground London
As nouns the difference between dateline and gateline
is that dateline is (journalism) a line at the beginning of a document (such as a newspaper article) stating the date and place of origin while gateline is a row of turnstiles allowing railway passengers to enter or exit on inserting a ticket.As a verb dateline
is to attach a to a particular document.dateline
English
Noun
(en noun)See also
*Verb
(datelin)citation
Anagrams
* *gateline
English
Noun
(en noun)- for example, ticket office staff can now perform platform and gateline duties and vice versa.
- Over and above our contribution to the British Transport Police, we will employ an additional 12 Community Support Officers and we will install or extend ticket gatelines at five stations.
- Provided you didn't surrender your ticket into the maw of the gateline at B, you could in theory go back to A and do the whole trip again.