释义 |
newsmannews‧man /ˈnjuːzmæn $ ˈnuːz-/ noun (plural newsmen /-men/) [countable]  - A throng of newsmen, accompanied by their photographers, left the hall in pursuit of the vanished Amaranth.
- A throng of politicians, newsmen, brokers, and Army officers stood in front of the counters that encircled it.
- Adds Northern newsman Charles Coffin: There is not much order.
- Dancing newsmen have been done to death.
- Many prisoners who actually had been newsmen had suffered serious abuse.
- My case can attract no eager newsmen.
- There were railway patterns in its drapers' shops, and railway journals in the windows of its newsmen.
- Yet he showed early promise as a newsman.
► journalist someone who writes for a newspaper or magazine: · She worked as a journalist on the New York Times.· I've always wanted to be a journalist. ► reporter someone whose job is to find out about news stories and ask questions for a newspaper, television or radio company etc: · A crowd of reporters were waiting outside the house all night.· He told reporters that he had no intention of resigning. ► correspondent someone who writes news articles or does reports about a particular subject, especially a serious one, for a newspaper or news organization: · our economics correspondent· a war correspondent· He was the BBC's correspondent in Moscow. ► columnist someone who writes articles, especially about a particular subject, that appear regularly in a newspaper or magazine: · an influential financial columnist· a gossip columnist ► hack informal a disapproving word for a journalist, especially one whose work is of low quality: · The editor sent one of his hacks to interview the murderer’s girlfriend. ► newsman/woman (also newspaperman/woman) a general word for someone who works for a newspaper, especially a reporter or editor: · an experienced newspaperman ► the press newspapers and journalists in general: · The press always like a good story about the royal family.· the right-wing press ► Fleet Street the British press. This phrase comes from the street in London, where many newspapers used to have their offices: · Relations between the government and Fleet Street aren't as cosy as they once were. someone who writes or reports news for a newspaper, radio, or television |