| A | B |
| broadsheet | full-size newspaper, averaging six columns to a page |
| column | 1. the vertical divisions of a page 2. opinion or comment expressed by a regular writer |
| deadline | a smaller format 1/2 broadsheet folded, often preferred by publishers of local papers or commuter papers and the sensationalist press (National Enquirer) |
| hard news | up-to-the-minute news and events that are reported immediately |
| headline | extra large font across top of front page |
| layout | the position of stories, advertisements, photos and graphics on a page |
| masthead | information about the newspaper, such as the name of the publishing company, names of the officers of the company, location of editorial offices, editorship and distribution facts, all usually found at the top of the editorial page |
| morgue | the newspaper's collection of clippings, photos, reference materials and microfilm |
| paparazzi | a person hired to rush to the scene and phone back information as soon as possible or to key the report into a word processing terminal at the newspaper officeinternational press corps who compete for stories, usually of a sensational nature |
| reporter | a person hired to rush to the scene and phone back information as soon as possible or to key the report into a word processing terminal at the newspaper office |
| soft news | background information or human interest stories |
| tabloid | a smaller format 1/2 broadsheet folded, often preferred by publishers of local papers or commuter papers and the sensationalist press (National Enquirer) |
| wire service | a news agency or organization that gathers news and transmits it to individual subscribing newspaper (AP, CP, Reuters) |