broadsheet
[
brawd
-sheet]
/ˈbrɔdˌʃit/
noun
1.
Chiefly British.
a newspaper printed on large paper, usually a respectable newspaper rather than a tabloid.
2.
broadside
(def 4).
Examples from the web for
broadsheet
The biweekly
broadsheet
focused mostly on patents and advice for inventors.
Here is some more detail on each of the bits of content contained in the daily
broadsheet
.
Still, the makeover marks a departure for the vapid
broadsheet
.
Their names, photos and party symbols occupied six pages of ballot papers the size of
broadsheet
newspapers.
Consider also the demise of the
broadsheet
in favor of news on a narrow screen.
Stories lived and died by how many inches a
broadsheet
had space for.
It will provide the same content as the home delivery
broadsheet
, but packaged in a new, compact format.
You're printing a tabloid and
broadsheet
for the same market.
The standard
broadsheet
newspaper is published every two weeks.
The four-page
broadsheet
ran blurbs about real estate transfers, births and deaths.
British Dictionary definitions for
broadsheet
broadsheet
/
ˈbrɔːdˌʃiːt
/
noun
1.
a newspaper having a large format, approximately 15 by 24 inches (38 by 61 centimetres)
Compare
tabloid
2.
another word for
broadside
(sense 4)