subheading
IPA: sʌbhɛdɪŋ
noun
- any of the headings under which each of the main divisions of a subject may be subdivided
- a heading or caption subordinate to a main headline, heading, or title especially when inserted as a divider between sections (as of a newspaper or periodical article or story or text of a book)
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Examples of "subheading" in Sentences
- Perhaps make it a subheading there.
- A single subheading is not required.
- Refactored to subheading accordingly.
- I changed the subheading to development of vitalism.
- The war is covered in one chapter and six measly subheadings.
- And kudos to the CBC for their subheading: "Piddle in wrong puddle".
- The subheadings just get in the way of the text and constrain the article.
- This seems the likely place to find the mayor creepy recall under a subheading?
- But the subheading is the GOP's secret hope: The two words Democrats don't want tacked onto that sentence.
- The subheading is the mistake of the Times's editors, as are a couple of missing commas and other incongruities.
- From The Independent, which in its subheading, is painting the Pope’s proposed apology as an attempt to defuse the scandal.
- And yet, President Obama's AGENDA on whitehouse. gov, under 'Urban Policy,' subheading 'Crime and Law Enforcement,' says this:
- • References to electrocution in the text and subheading of an article describing the treatment of detainees in Cairo should have been to electric shock.
- • In one edition of Saturday's paper a subheading pluralised TV presenter Anne Robinson when it said that she was "a global phenomena" Goodbye Weakest Link, 23 April, page 27.
- • Owing to a misunderstanding, a subheading said that an interview with Brad Pitt was based on a meeting with the actor, when the conversation was actually by telephone Brad education, 1 July, page 3, Film & Music.
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