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chyron

American  
[kahy-ron] / ˈkaɪ rɒn /

noun

  1. a text-based graphic overlay displayed at the bottom of a television screen or film frame, as closed captioning or the crawl of a newscast.


verb (used with object)

  1. to display (information) in overlaid text at the bottom of a screen.

    The network prematurely chyroned what they believed to be final election results and had to issue a correction shortly thereafter.

Usage

What is a chyron? A chyron is a text-based graphic that overlays video content, such as television shows and movies.Chyron is the general name for any graphic that is superimposed over a video or live broadcast. While a chyron is usually placed at the bottom of a frame, it can appear anywhere within the frame.Closed-captioning is a common use of chyrons and generally appears at the bottom of the video frame. Chyrons placed here might also include important information for the video, such as the time and location of the scene. Newscasts often use chyrons for news headlines, sports scores, stock market information, weather reports, and other related information.Example: For the weather report frame, Nick created a custom chyron that can support images of rain clouds.

Etymology

Origin of chyron

First recorded in 1975–80; after Chyron Corporation, the manufacturer of a broadcast graphics generator

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

How quickly or slowly can the chyrons listing adverse reactions scurry across your screen?

From Salon

Car Chase — that’s the direct, if unimaginative, name for Pluto TV’s new channel — airs each pursuit from the first breaking news chyron to its inevitable end.

From Los Angeles Times

Google also played with the date Thursday with a mini chyron that reads, “Table for ✌️?,” when users search “Zack and Cody” or “Suite Life on Deck.”

From Los Angeles Times

Veterans of real networks’ election night coverage were consulted for everything from on-air chyrons to what could go wrong with news breaking so fast.

From Los Angeles Times

“Fox 5 footage featuring protesters and a chyron reading ‘State of Emergency Declared in Georgia’ also appeared at the 1:21 mark in the original video.

From Washington Times