shoutline

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

shout +‎ line

Noun[edit]

shoutline (plural shoutlines)

  1. (advertising) A line of text that is formatted to be particularly eye-catching.
    • 1999, Julian Friedmann, Roy Ascott, How to Make Money Scriptwriting, →ISBN, page 74:
      The shoutline of the poster for the film (which had some theatrical exhibition in countries like Spain, Germany and some in South America and a substantial video release) was: 'He came to destroy her family. And she fell in love with him.'
    • 2000, Rodney Dale, The Wordsworth Book of Urban Legend, →ISBN, page 191:
      Apart from the imprint, and the type size, the two versions differ only in the spelling on the front cover, in that the Duckworth shoutline describes the book as 'an hilarous collection of apocryphal anecdotes', a mistake that for ever more mortified the meticulous Colin when, in proudly passing me a copy of the book hot from the press, his eye suddenly fell on the misprint on the jacket.
    • 2014, Kris James, Hook, Tagline, and Sinker: Writing Irresistible Book Descriptions:
      The third shoutline and final paragraph hint at this final conflict.

Anagrams[edit]