释义 |
editorialed‧i‧to‧ri‧al2 AWL adjective - editorial comments
- Sharon is an editorial assistant in the sports department.
- the editorial pages in the newspaper
- But the editorial method which is applied to the data has much to display that is well-spoken.
- Designers use the girls because they ensure editorial coverage.
- I don't give a darn if the results don't coincide with the editorial board's political biases!
- Joel Nilsson is an editorial writer for the Arizona Republic.
- The readability of the review itself is the paramount editorial consideration.
► an editorial column (=that expresses the opinion of a newspaper editor)· the Financial Times editorial column NOUN► assistant· All the editorial assistants except Hannah, who's on holiday, and all the production staff.· And Rosemary Carey, an editorial assistant at the journal since 1984, said she had never heard of Yaki. ► board· The Club controlled a section of Tribune, Gollancz eventually replacing Mellor on its editorial board.· The Journal of Medical Screening aims to be international and multidisciplinary, and the editorial board reflects these aims.· Now according to Jung, the Animus operates as a not-nice, all-male editorial board somewhere inside your fluffy head!· She was on the editorial board of the radical magazine Black Dwarf.· If an elected official did anything remotely similar, the editorial boards of both daily newspapers would howl for their heads.· Clearly a serious publication, it enjoys the support of a number of leading academics on its editorial board. ► comment· I didn't mind sober editorial comment. ► content· Messrs Murdoch, Maxwell and Rowland, amongst others, are known to have attempted to exercise control over editorial content.· Their editorial content is usually limited to items of consumer interest and the editorial staff is kept to a minimum.· It is in the field of editorial content that the Great and Good of independent television have exercised their most direct influence. ► control· The Founders now told Pilger that the role they had given him was something less than total editorial control.· The great thing about only having a licence fee is that you do retain complete editorial control and all the rights. ► decision· We will do so knowing that whatever we do, whatever normal editorial decisions we make may be misinterpreted.· Several factors probably went into the editorial decision to delete such an antiquated phrase.· Only a reader familiar with Magritte's art will not be confused by this strange editorial decision.· He makes the key editorial decisions including when a story is aired, its length and position in the program. ► director· At any rate, the most prominent critic was Nick Seitz, the editorial director of Golf Digest and its sister publications.· Beverley Hilton, editorial director of Eaglemoss Publications, retires on 1st April, but remains on the board.· Isabel Moore, formerly at Octopus, joins the company on 1st April as editorial director.· Without consultation, Hayling had invited Pilger to move up from being a mere adviser to the new post of editorial director.· Jonathan Burnham, editorial director of Chatto, will become publishing director for the imprint, with Alison Samuel as his deputy. ► policy· Ostensibly objective textual scholarship adopted editorial policies which for many years worked to ensure the above assumptions could be confirmed.· I trust that the Times editorial policy under Parks will begin with the business-side difficulties kept down to a dull roar.· Until 1946 editorial policy was a Government responsibility.· Each of these has a different editorial policy and, to a lesser or greater degree, a political bias.· Is there a range of journals, with contrasting editorial policies?· The company is expected to keep the paper's moderate pro-Unionist editorial policy.· The new editorial policy complicates the process of producing authorised versions, but it does not substantially change it.· This would give him control of editorial policy. ► staff· Upstairs the editorial staff was also swelling.· Downtown News editorial staff a behind-the-scenes look at what will be a major new local landmark.· It is worth remembering that most editorial staff will not be in the office much before 10.00 or 11.00 am.· The editorial staff of the International Journal of Leprosy took the lead.· Pushing his editorial staff to be better all the time is appropriate.· However, this can have problems, as the editorial staff of the magazine will want to have some input.· With two of Athene's editorial staff off sick, a heavier load was falling on the shoulders of those remaining. ► team· There were question marks too over Branson's choice of his editorial team.· Sem Dnei plans to continue publishing Itogi, using an entirely new editorial team.· The editorial team have tried to achieve a balance between matters which are of major concern to staff and some lighthearted topics.· The editorial team would like to encourage this trend.· In return we in the editorial team will try to keep you up to date with what is going on in the University. nounediteditoreditioneditorialeditorializeeditorshipadjectiveeditorialverbeditadverbeditorially 1relating to the preparation of a newspaper, book, television programme etc for printing or broadcasting: an editorial assistant2[usually before noun] expressing the opinion of a particular newspaper editor rather than just giving facts: the paper’s editorial column—editorially adverb: The paper is editorially independent. |