Estos ejercicios te ayudarán a consolidar el vocabulario clave de los medios de comunicación en inglés visto en el curso. Pon a prueba tu dominio de términos como broadcast, scoop, anchor y bias en contextos reales.
→ Ver el curso : El vocabulario de los medios en inglés : curso completo
Exercice 1 — ¿Cuál es la definición correcta?
Elige la opción que mejor define cada término del vocabulario de los medios en inglés.
- What does the term 'scoop' mean in a media context?
- Which of the following best describes 'bias' in journalism?
- What is the role of an 'anchor' in a news programme?
- What does 'to broadcast' primarily mean?
Correction
- An exclusive story reported before any other outlet.
- A tendency to present information in a way that favours a particular viewpoint.
- They present and host the news programme, linking different segments.
- To transmit audio or video content to a wide audience via radio or television.
Exercice 2 — Une los términos con su contexto de uso
Asocia cada término con la frase que mejor ilustra su uso real en los medios de comunicación en inglés.
- anchor
- scoop
- bias
- broadcast
Correction
- She has been the anchor of the evening news for over a decade, guiding viewers through breaking stories with authority and composure.
- The journalist landed a major scoop when she obtained leaked documents about the government's secret negotiations before any other reporter.
- Critics accused the channel of political bias after its coverage consistently framed the opposition party in a negative light.
- The station decided to broadcast the press conference live so that viewers across the country could follow the announcement in real time.
Exercice 3 — Completa las frases con el vocabulario adecuado
Rellena cada espacio en blanco con el término o expresión del vocabulario de los medios que corresponda según el contexto.
- The network's chief ___ opened the programme by summarising the key events of the day before handing over to correspondents in the field.
- Securing a ___ of this magnitude — the first interview with the whistleblower — catapulted the young reporter to national fame overnight.
- Media watchdogs warned that unchecked ___ in news reporting could seriously undermine public trust in established institutions over time.
- The charity decided to ___ its awareness campaign across multiple radio and television channels in order to reach the widest possible audience.
Correction
- The network's chief anchor opened the programme by summarising the key events of the day before handing over to correspondents in the field.
- Securing a scoop of this magnitude — the first interview with the whistleblower — catapulted the young reporter to national fame overnight.
- Media watchdogs warned that unchecked bias in news reporting could seriously undermine public trust in established institutions over time.
- The charity decided to broadcast its awareness campaign across multiple radio and television channels in order to reach the widest possible audience.
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