Broadsheet

Broadsheet ( dt: broad leaf ) is the English name of a newspaper format. Often it is more or less twice a tabloid format.

German examples are the Süddeutsche Zeitung and Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. Historically apply newspapers in broadsheet format than the "serious" quality newspapers - is a journal of record, as in the English -speaking world likes to put it. In German the term subscription newspaper is also often used.

" Tabloids " have their counterpart in Germany rather in the tabloids. However, this has changed in recent years, as some broadsheets such as The Times and The Guardian in England and Le Monde in France, have shifted to tabloid formats. This has to do, among other things, that broadsheet newspapers are not so easy to handle, for example, on public transport or at kitchen tables.

Had the title page of a newspaper in the traditional U.S. broadsheet format, the dimensions of 15 inches ( inches) wide and 22 3/4 inches high ( 38.1 cm wide and 57.785 cm height). In order to reduce the cost of paper, newspapers such as the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times in 2007 are gone over to reduce the size in width by three inches. The current U.S. broadsheet format is now at 12 inches wide (30.48 cm); at the height of just under 58 cm it has remained. Apart from these two daily newspapers, the Washington Post has this format, in Germany it using the English language monthly newspaper The Atlantic Times and The German Times.

  • Newspaper
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