Sentence examples for headlined from inspiring English sources

The word "headlined" is correct and usable in written English
You can use it when you want to refer to something that was featured prominently. For example, you could say, "The show headlined several popular bands."

Dictionary

headlined

verb

Past of headline

Exact(60)

Updated at 8.58pm BST Facebook Twitter Google plus Share Share this post Facebook Twitter Google plus close 8.48pm BSThe:48 The main story on the front page of Wednesday's International Herald Tribune is headlined: 'Newspaper stands up to British pressure'.

Moving on 20 years to December 2011, when Cameron used Britain's veto to block an EU-wide treaty, the Sun greeted the news with a splash headlined "Up Eurs" with a photoshopped picture of "bulldog" Cameron giving a two-fingered salute.

The advert, across pages 2 and 3, was headlined "one thing affects everything" above an image of dominoes – with the first, ready to fall, branded "European Union".

Even the normally loyal Sunday Mirror carried a piece headlined "Miliband's got six weeks to shape up".

I read a small item in a specialist newsletter I get by email, called Daily Virology News, headlined "Two cases of swine flu in Orange County, California".

A well-received MacTaggart lecture at the 2012 Edinburgh TV Festival was followed by a lengthy New Yorker profile in December that year, headlined Heiress: the rise of Elisabeth Murdoch.

On this, Holocaust Memorial Day and the 70th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau, the Telegraph's David Blair reveals how it obtained the story it published on 25 June 1942, headlined "Germans murder 700,000 Jews in Poland".

The Sun's front page is dominated by a story about a footballer's alleged misbehaviour but it does manage to carry a small political story headlined Bright to buy.

The Indy's leader, headlined "Pink Ed", thinks his manifesto "is moderate enough to win over floating voters".

So the Financial Times's splash is headlined Cameron builds on Right to Buy in effort to regain the edge from Miliband and its leading article, unimpressed with Labour's financial pledges, is headlined Miliband's belated vow to do his fiscal homework.

In the article for the university's Tab newspaper, headlined, "It's time for us to speak out", Ebel said there were too many "faceless victims" and that it was time to change society's attitude towards sexual assault.

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