SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
Journalism Vocab
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
journalism-and-media
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. People or records from which a reporter gets information.
Editor
Sources
Copy
Background
2. An article expressing a newspaper or magazine owner's or editor's position on an issue
Editorial
Trend story
Add
Actual malice
3. A smaller headline which comes between the headline and the story
Screens
Deck
Sources
Immediate-identification lead
4. The process of preparing page drawings to indicate where stories and pictures are to be placed in the newspaper.
Lead story
General manager
Press
Lay out(v.)
5. To inject the reporter's or the newspaper's opinion into a news story or headline.
Cutline
Wire services
Sidebar
Editorialize
6. The 'banner' across the front page which identifies the newspaper and the date of publication
Masthead
Shield laws
Shirttail
Date line
7. An indirect quote or summary of the words the news maker said - condensing and clarifying a quotation to convey the meaning more precisely than the way the speaker expressed it.
Plagiarism
Column
Pulitzer Prize
Paraphrase
8. A story including a number of related events.
Participant observation
roundup
Background
Jump
9. A story intended to reveal the personality or character of an institution or person.
Profile
General manager
Brightener
Sources
10. Narrow margin of white space in the center area in a magazine newspaper or book where two pages meet
Gutter
Bias
Rules
Closed-ended question
11. A person who talks to a reporter on the record for attribution in a news story
Source
Editor
Bias
Sidebar
12. A page of typewritten copy for newspaper use.
Sidebar
Take
Date line
Screens
13. Short related story added to the end of a longer one
Shirttail
Lead or 'lede'
Beat
Sources
14. Story that requires a great amount of research and hard work to come up with facts that might be hidden buried or obscured by people who have a vested interest in keeping those facts from being published
Investigative journalism
Lead or 'lede'
Gutter
Cub
15. Credit given to who said what or the source of facts
Verification
Lay out(v.)
Rules
Attribution
16. The completed page drawing.
Layout (n.)
Take
Sources
Spin
17. An ending that finishes a story with a climax surprise or punch line
Sidebar
Angle
Tip
Kicker
18. Any overly obscure technical or bureaucratic words that would not be used in everyday language
Editorial
Press
Jargon
Byline
19. A research technique in which the reporter joins in the activity he or she wants to write about.
Participant observation
Puff piece or puffery
Jump
HFR
20. A story that focuses on the human side of news and often appeals to the readers' emotion - a piece valued more for its emotional impact or oddity than for its importance.
Crony journalism
Human interest story
Kicker
Hard news stories
21. The person who 'edits' a story by revising and polishing
Editorialize
Participant observation
Clips
Editor
22. The term most journalists use for a newspaper article.
Puff piece or puffery
Actual malice
B-roll
Story
23. Damage to a person's reputation caused by a false written statement that brings the person into hatred contempt or ridicule or injures his or her business or occupation.
Shield laws
General manager
Inverted pyramid
Libel
24. A reporter's assigned area of responsibility. It may be an institution a geographical area or a subject such as science.
Shirttail
Jargon
Beat
Cub
25. A writer's development of distinctive characteristics and idiosyncrasies of language use that make his or her writing as easily recognizable as the inflections tone and pronunciation of speech that make a person's vocalized speech pat terns distinc
Exclusive
Jargon
Voice
Plagiarism
26. Abbreviation for paragraph
Add
Paraphrase
Beat
Graf
27. An article in which a writer or columnist gives an opinion on a topic
AP The Associated Press
Lead story
By-line
Column
28. Reporting that ignores or treats lightly negative news about friends of a reporter.
Shirttail
Angle
Crony journalism
Bias
29. In libel law a reckless disregard for the truth such as when a reporter or an editor knows that a statement is false and prints or airs it anyway.
Spin
Actual malice
Graf
Editorialize
30. Opening paragraph of a story in which the 'who' is identified by occupation city office or any means other than by name.
Plagiarism
Crony journalism
Delayed-identification lead
Op-ed page
31. A typewritten page of copy following the first page.
Angle
Press
Delayed-identification lead
Add
32. A beginning reporter.
Brightener
Sidebar
Puff piece or puffery
Cub
33. Factual accounts of important events usually appearing first in a newspaper
Hard news stories
Brightener
Plagiarism
Copy
34. Stories that are interesting but less important than hard news - focusing on people as well as facts and information and including interviews reviews articles and editorials
Beat
Soft news
Story
AP The Associated Press
35. The place the story was filed
AP The Associated Press
Immediate-identification lead
Date line
Multiple-element lead
36. Correspondent not a regular staff member who is paid by the story or by the number of words written.
Soft news
B-roll
Stringer
Tip
37. To keep abreast of significant developments on a beat or to report on a specfic event.
Investigative journalism
Cover
By-line
Editorial
38. The organization of a news story in which information is arranged in descending order of importance.
Follow
Editorial
Morgue
Inverted pyramid
39. Legislation giving journalists the right to protect the identity of sources.
Multiple-element lead
Take
Shield laws
Deck
40. Stories clipped from your own or other newspapers.
Background
Cover
Follow
Clips
41. The first sentence or first few sentences of a story
Warning
: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in
/var/www/html/basicversity.com/show_quiz.php
on line
183
42. Usually means 'don't quote me.'
Copy
Crop
Off the record
Verification
43. A collection filed according to date of newspaper clippings letters notes and other information to remind editors of stories to assign.
Package
Banner
Futures files
Sidebar
44. The individual responsible for the business operations of a newspaper.
Cutline
General manager
Wire services
Banner
45. The caption that accompanies a newspaper or magazine photograph.
Crony journalism
Delayed-identification lead
Rules
Cutline
46. The main article on the front page of a newspaper or the cover story in a magazine
Sidebar
Feature article
Caption
Deck
47. A worldwide news-gathering cooperative owned by its subscribers.
Shield laws
Libel
AP The Associated Press
Sidebar
48. Shaded areas of copy in a newspaper
Immediate-identification lead
Screens
Stringer
Morgue
49. Any written material intended for publication including advertising - What reporters write. A story is a piece of copy.
Copy
Gutter
Inverted pyramid
Hard news stories
50. The name of the reporter
By-line
Byline
Op-ed page
Story