'Ship' is related to 'Captain' as the person-in-charge responsible for command and editorial authority. By a parallel relation, 'Newspaper' is related to which role?

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: Editor

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:
Here the analogy is about leadership or responsibility. A captain commands a ship. The corresponding person-in-charge for a newspaper, with authority over content and policy, must be identified.


Given Data / Assumptions:

  • Ship requires a role that leads and makes final decisions: captain.
  • Newspaper requires an equivalent role overseeing content and direction.
  • Distinct publishing roles include editor, publisher, printer, reporter, reader.


Concept / Approach:
We look for the role that is to a newspaper what a captain is to a ship: the leader with decision-making authority over operations/content. That is the editor-in-chief/editor (editor as the canonical term in options).


Step-by-Step Solution:
1) Identify control/command role in first pair: captain.2) Map to newspaper roles: editor, publisher, printer, etc.3) The editor sets editorial policy, approves content, and leads the newsroom — analogous to command.


Verification / Alternative check:
In organizational structures, the editor-in-chief has ultimate editorial responsibility, just as a captain has command responsibility aboard a ship.


Why Other Options Are Wrong:

  • Reader: Consumer, not in charge.
  • Printer: Handles printing operations; not editorial head.
  • Publisher: Business/ownership function; not content leader in the editorial sense.
  • Reporter: Produces stories; does not set overall editorial policy.


Common Pitfalls:
Confusing the business head (publisher) with the editorial head (editor). The analogy centers on command over core function: navigation vs. editorial content.


Final Answer:
Editor

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