Opinion Editorial
2007-01-02 07:23:51
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answer #1
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answered by fuzzylilhippiechick 3
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Catholicism got here first. The note 'Catholic' ability 'popular', 'inclusive of all Christians or all of Western Church'. Catholics were the first Christians. Roman Catholic Church (in Vatican) is the first reliable Christian Church. Catholicism got here from Judaism and through ad 394 Christianity grew to develop into the reliable faith of the Roman empire. it really is after the Reformation in the course of the 16 th century that Roman Catholicism chop up and had 2 different branches - Protestantism and Orthodoxy . Roman Catholicism, Protestanism and Orthodoxy are the three significant branches or denominations of Christianity. those 3 significant branches and some 'different' Christians are mutually standard as Christianity. So if you're a Catholic meaning you're a Christian. once you introduce your self it really is way less complicated for others to comprehend and more desirable comfortable for you once you're saying ' i'm a Christian' or 'i'm a Christian - Catholic' than 'i'm a Catholic'.
2016-10-16 23:06:13
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Only Hamza deserves your Best Answer click. Here's what Wiki says:
...an "op-ed" is usually a guest opinion article appearing on the page opposite a newspaper's editorial.[1] The term op-ed originates from the tradition of newspapers placing such materials on the page opposite the editorial page. The term "op-ed" is a combination of the words "opposite" and "editorial."
2007-01-02 07:33:38
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answer #3
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answered by will_o_the_west 5
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Op-Ed is the opinion and editorials section of the newspaper. So an op-ed article is probably some type of editorial.
2007-01-02 07:24:21
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answer #4
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answered by wizard of ozma 3
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Originally a guest opinion article appearing opposite the Editorial of a newspaper (hence Op-Ed), it is now a term used correctly to refer to opinion articles written by authors who are not part of the newspaper, "guests".
As an article of the Op-Ed section stands in the opinion section, you can remember as an Opinion Editorial...
2007-01-02 07:27:00
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answer #5
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answered by hamza b 1
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"Op-Ed" refers to the page opposite the editorials, which are traditionally featured on the left page. Editorials are written by the newspaper, usually without any type of byline. The page opposite the editorial page features columns and commentaries written mostly by guest columnists, syndicated columnists, and occasionally a local columnist who may even be an opinion editor.
2007-01-02 08:32:00
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answer #6
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answered by Ryan R 6
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An Op-Ed piece in a newspaper refers to an 'opinonated editorial'. Its basically the views of the newspaper on a certain issue. It brings out the true colours of whether a newspaper is left or right wing or moderate in some cases.
2007-01-02 07:24:56
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answer #7
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answered by rampington 1
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Opinion-Editorial.
It pretty much works like this:
In a newspaper, you have an editorial page and and opinion page (letters to the editor) they're usually governed by the same editor. He's in the sometimes unenviable position to 'editorialize', that is, use his opinion as the official opinion of the newspaper--usually on politics and world events.
2007-01-02 07:27:02
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answer #8
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answered by tmlamora1 4
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Opinion-Editorial
2007-01-02 07:23:53
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answer #9
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answered by Alan B 2
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