scarehead
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]scarehead (plural scareheads)
- An alarming or sensational headline.
- 1910, Mary Roberts Rinehart, The Window at the White Cat[1]:
- If then he makes a scarehead of it, and gets in three columns of space and as many photographs, it is his just reward.
- 1925, Sidney Coe Howard, They Knew What They Wanted (Doubleday, Page and Company), Act III, page 134.
- Joe sits on the porch rail outside the window perusing the scareheads of an I. W. W. paper.
- 1952, The Beta Theta Pi, volume 79, number 2, page 271:
- For sound reasons of literary structure, the Eta Bita Pies had their temporary setbacks, but over the closing scene there always rang out triumphantly that grand, old anthem: "Oh, you've got to be an Eta Bita Pie Or you won't get a scarehead when you die!"
- 2017, Julian Murphet, Faulkner's Media Romance, →ISBN, page 219:
- News, here, is what does not stay news, but is reified into undeviating headlines: the stilldamp neat row of boxes which in the paper's natural order had no scarehead, containing, since there was nothing new in them since time began, likewise no alarm: —that corssection out of timespace as though of a lightray caught by a speed lens for a seconds fraction between infinity and furious and trivial dust:
Verb
[edit]scarehead (third-person singular simple present scareheads, present participle scareheading, simple past and past participle scareheaded)
- To write an alarming or sensational headline about.
- 1923, ???, “The Young Man Who Wanted to Die”, in Weird Tales[2], page 135:
- As soon as my dead body is found the newspapers will want to know why I did it. I'll tell them. And they may scarehead it as much as they like.