From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishbroadsheetbroad‧sheet /ˈbrɔːdʃiːt $ ˈbrɒːd-/ noun [countable] TCNa newspaper printed on large sheets of paper, especially a serious newspaper → tabloid► see thesaurus at newspaper
Examples from the Corpus
broadsheet• Broadsheets are aimed at an educated middle and upper-class readership.• There is a broadsheet plastered crookedly to a wall near their bungalow.• Tabloid a page half the size of a broadsheet.• In 1945 most people read a broadsheet paper - four populars and the two qualities, compared with two tabloids.• Only the Sunday Express, among all the middle market populars, was still a broadsheet in 1990.• I have sent you a broadsheet which surveys our campaigns.• The daily broadsheet circulates widely in the Arab world and among Arabs living in the West.• Anything of only momentary interest was delegated to broadsheets or handbills.