"To hit the headlines" means to become widely reported or recognized in the news or media.
Full definition
Watch the kids, think you will see a few who can win the ball back, they just don't
hit the headlines as often.
Sex addiction usually
hits the headlines when someone famous gets caught behaving badly and lays the blame on their «disorder».
Reports of churches doing well don't
usually hit the headlines, but in villages, towns and cities right across the nation, there are many reasons to be hopeful.
In fact, the company has been
hitting the headlines quite a lot over the last few weeks as they have a number of handsets in the process of being released.
Though the lone start tick seems to have
hit the headlines out of the blue, experts have been noticing a rise in allergic reactions over the last decade.
There is plenty of rumours about this transfer, but none have
hit the headlines in this window, yet.
She accuses them of not having taken her complaint seriously until a deluge of sexual harassment scandals
hit the headlines last year.
However, Virgin Group
recently hit the headlines for holding a corporate day where all employees were asked to behave in the way many traditional firms require.
Labour Peer Jon Mendelsohn is most recently recognisable from his work trying to nip the the David Abrahams Labour donor scandal in the bud - but he also
hit the headlines early in the Blair years, as a character in the Lobbygate scandal.
This exciting brand is constantly assessing its potential for growth and most recently
hit the headlines with the launch of Echo Falls Summer Berries Vodka backed by a # 5m investment package.
At the end of March a brutal fight broke out in Argentina's Primera B division, with both sets of players from Instituto and Guillermo Brown ending the fixture in chaos — and now the country's Primera division has
also hit the headlines for violence, in what is an appalling advert for Argentine football.
Telegram has also frequently
hit the headlines over its use by terrorists, although that is more to do with its unencrypted «channels» feature, through which people can broadcast their opinions to followers.
Draper: Tezos «Going To Improve The World» Draper, who
first hit the headlines in Bitcoin after he won around 32,000 BTC in the Silk Road auctions in 2014, called Tezos «one of the tokens that is going improve the world.»
The issue
hit the headlines again last year when a Guardian investigation suggested the practise was not confined to Mr Goodman and had been widespread at the newspaper, with many household names from political, sporting and cultural life, having their privacy invaded.
As my colleague David Meyer reports, the purchase will likely require the scrutiny of the U.S. Committee on Foreign Investment (CFIUS), which recently
hit the headlines by stalling Broadcom's unsolicited bid for Qualcomm until President Donald Trump outright nixed that deal.
As with the work by parking fine bot developer Joshua Browder,
who hit the headlines earlier this year, when the end goal of a chat bot is to complete a form that is then used to make a legal claim of some type, then the technology is incredibly useful.
The controversial subject of term - time holidays
hit the headlines on Friday 13 May with the decision of the Divisional Court in Isle of Wight Council v Platt.
It had already been an amazing run for the Imps from Lincoln who have already got past Premier League chasing Brighton and an another Championship side in Ipswich Town, but they
really hit the headlines today after beating EPL club Burnley to become the first non-league club to ever reach the last eight.
Shortly thereafter, the
issue hit the headlines when the Trump administration moved to reverse the Obama administration's guidelines on transgender students» access to sex - segregated facilities.
Jewish and Muslim fundamentalists have all experienced modernity as a devastating assault, and their activities often
hit the headlines because they pose a grave danger to the Middle East peace process.
The
scandal hit headlines last September, when a senior official in the Hellenic competition authority was charged with blackmail after allegedly demanding about $ 2.5 m from a company under investigation.
After the Star Wars Battlefront 2 loot box furore
hit the headlines late last year, the outcry over the video game industry's use of what some reckon is gambling in video games appeared to die down.
Failings inconveniencing passengers
hit the headlines at the beginning of 2008, when engineering works supposed to be completed before New Year's Eve over-ran to affect the first commutes of the New Year.
Acer's WIFI - only Iconia Tab A500 made its public debut at Mobile World Congress this year in Barcelona, where the 32 GB model went on sale mid-March and also
hit the headlines of late, where it received a # 100 price cut along with a storage cut to 16 GB, from 32 GB.
The Iconia Tab that has been in the news more for its constant delays than anything else has
now hit the headlines for all the right reasons.
The player is not required to kill any civilians, and is allowed to skill the level entirely without penalty, but that didn't stop No Russian from
hitting the headlines across the global media back in 2009.
an independent press office helping to ensure that the public have access to the best scientific evidence and expertise through the news media when science hits the headlines
Searching for clarity in the family courts The differing opinions of senior judges on matters such as the privacy of proceedings mean family practitioners can struggle to accurately advise clients, explains Alex Carruthers Once again, family law
cases hit the headlines in national newspapers in 2015.