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long-form

Or DzԲ·ڴǰ

[lawng-fawrm, long]

adjective

  1. noting or relating to journalistic content or a genre of journalism characterized by stories or essays that are several thousand words long, typically combining factual reporting with a narrative and empathetic style.

    A long-form article can illuminate and humanize your subject.

  2. noting or relating to other types of print or visual media content characterized by in-depth, lengthy narratives.

    a long-form TV drama whose story unfolds over ten episodes; long-form comics and graphic novels.



noun

  1. journalistic or other media content so characterized.

    I've started writing more long-form on my blog.

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Word History and Origins

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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

The collective recently started creating short- and long-form social media content, and they will debut their first Swang apparel piece at Paris Fashion Week later this month.

From

Throughout his experiences, he has maintained an interest in long-form investigative journalism, focused on money in politics, LGBTQ+ rights and extremism.

From

Whether you call the film a promotional tie-in or companion piece — it was filmed two years ago, before all the album’s tracks were recorded — it’s still little more than a long-form music video vanity project, straining for importance, fumbling at resonance.

From

Then she moved to Chicago to train in long-form improv, first at the Annoyance Theater and then at Second City.

From

Facing the blank page perturbed Boneta at the beginning of his first foray into long-form writing, so he asked his writer friends for advice.

From

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