Headline vs Topic - What's the difference?
headline | topic |
A heading or title of an article.
* {{quote-magazine, date=2013-06-22, volume=407, issue=8841, page=76, magazine=(The Economist)
, title= (entertainment) The top-billed attraction.
(nautical) A headrope.
(entertainment) To have top billing; to be the main attraction
(l)
Subject; theme; a category or general area of interest.
*{{quote-magazine, date=2013-08-03, volume=408, issue=8847, magazine=(The Economist)
, title= (Internet) Discussion thread.
(obsolete) An argument or reason.
* Bishop Wilkins
(obsolete, medicine) An external local application or remedy, such as a plaster, a blister, etc.
As nouns the difference between headline and topic
is that headline is a heading or title of an article while topic is subject; theme; a category or general area of interest.As a verb headline
is to have top billing; to be the main attraction.As an adjective topic is
topical.headline
English
Noun
(en noun)Snakes and ladders, passage=Risk is everywhere. From tabloid headlines insisting that coffee causes cancer (yesterday, of course, it cured it) to stern government warnings about alcohol and driving, the world is teeming with goblins. For each one there is a frighteningly precise measurement of just how likely it is to jump from the shadows and get you.}}
Synonyms
* (heading) hed * (top-billed attraction) headlinerSee also
*Verb
(headlin)Derived terms
* headlinertopic
English
(wikipedia topic)Alternative forms
* topick (obsolete)Adjective
Noun
(en noun)The machine of a new soul, passage=The yawning gap in neuroscientists’ understanding of their topic is in the intermediate scale of the brain’s anatomy. Science has a passable knowledge of how individual nerve cells, known as neurons, work. It also knows which visible lobes and ganglia of the brain do what. But how the neurons are organised in these lobes and ganglia remains obscure. Yet this is the level of organisation that does the actual thinking—and is, presumably, the seat of consciousness.}}
- contumacious persons, who are not to be fixed by any principles, whom no topics can work upon
- (Wiseman)
