| 释义 | 
		Definition of punditocracy in English: punditocracynoun pʌndɪˈtɒkrəsiˌpəndiˈtäkrəsē mass nounAn elite or influential class of experts or political commentators.  it’s a speech that won't go over too well with the punditocracy but probably played pretty well at home  Example sentencesExamples -  It's the punditocracy that is taking online betting particularly seriously.
 -  The US government and the US press and the US punditocracy was living in a fantasy land.
 -  There are no people on Earth more smug and superior than the right-wing punditocracy.
 -  But for the most part they came, as the question-and-answer sessions quickly revealed, because they were tired of being suckered by the television news networks and the right-wing punditocracy.
 -  In the absence of much substantive news, though, the punditocracy is making glorious hay from the ongoing swirl of rumor, and I for one enjoy rampant speculation as much as the next person.
 -  They can be found in the corporate media, especially the blowhard punditocracy.
 -  He is at the very top of the conservative punditocracy.
 -  The fake story, repeated in a thousand news headlines, and beat to death week after week by the bloviating punditocracy, goes something like this.
 -  Membership in this punditocracy creates a natural risk bias - a kind of journalistic ‘moral hazard.’
 -  The national championship should be decided on the field by football players, not by the whims of the sports punditocracy.
 -  This discussion was actually promoted by the war party itself - together with its punditocracy cheerleaders - as it allowed its members to wrap themselves in the flag of free speech.
 -  The reaction of the some of the domestic punditocracy is almost as embarrassing as the abuse itself.
 -  It appears no mistake is too obvious, no theory too hairbrained, no argument too ridiculous to be taken seriously - as long as it is consistent with the consensus ‘wisdom’ of the punditocracy, which is the consensus of the ruling elite.
 -  I defend the right of everyone to have their own opinion, but if simply parrots the words of the politicians and punditocracy who use their positions to control the debate, then I reserve the right of dissent.
 -  In the process, a charmed circle of bloggers - those glib enough and ideologically safe enough to fit within the conventional media punditocracy - is gaining larger audiences and greater influence.
 -  I think it was Mark Twain who said nobody ever went broke overestimating the idiocy of the American television punditocracy.
 -  Irony is dead, the punditocracy twittered a few years back.
 -  Let me take a break from punditocracy on the Deep and Meaningful events of the week.
 -  However, the knock-on effect was to catapult her into the front rank of America's punditocracy, where she has remained ever since.
 -  He's doing what he thinks is right and doesn't begin from any of the premises that the official Washington punditocracy discourse begins from.
 
    Definition of punditocracy in US English: punditocracynounˌpəndiˈtäkrəsē An elite or influential class of experts or political commentators.  it’s a speech that won't go over too well with the punditocracy but probably played pretty well at home  Example sentencesExamples -  They can be found in the corporate media, especially the blowhard punditocracy.
 -  Irony is dead, the punditocracy twittered a few years back.
 -  Membership in this punditocracy creates a natural risk bias - a kind of journalistic ‘moral hazard.’
 -  There are no people on Earth more smug and superior than the right-wing punditocracy.
 -  Let me take a break from punditocracy on the Deep and Meaningful events of the week.
 -  The national championship should be decided on the field by football players, not by the whims of the sports punditocracy.
 -  It appears no mistake is too obvious, no theory too hairbrained, no argument too ridiculous to be taken seriously - as long as it is consistent with the consensus ‘wisdom’ of the punditocracy, which is the consensus of the ruling elite.
 -  The US government and the US press and the US punditocracy was living in a fantasy land.
 -  But for the most part they came, as the question-and-answer sessions quickly revealed, because they were tired of being suckered by the television news networks and the right-wing punditocracy.
 -  The reaction of the some of the domestic punditocracy is almost as embarrassing as the abuse itself.
 -  I think it was Mark Twain who said nobody ever went broke overestimating the idiocy of the American television punditocracy.
 -  The fake story, repeated in a thousand news headlines, and beat to death week after week by the bloviating punditocracy, goes something like this.
 -  He's doing what he thinks is right and doesn't begin from any of the premises that the official Washington punditocracy discourse begins from.
 -  This discussion was actually promoted by the war party itself - together with its punditocracy cheerleaders - as it allowed its members to wrap themselves in the flag of free speech.
 -  In the absence of much substantive news, though, the punditocracy is making glorious hay from the ongoing swirl of rumor, and I for one enjoy rampant speculation as much as the next person.
 -  In the process, a charmed circle of bloggers - those glib enough and ideologically safe enough to fit within the conventional media punditocracy - is gaining larger audiences and greater influence.
 -  However, the knock-on effect was to catapult her into the front rank of America's punditocracy, where she has remained ever since.
 -  I defend the right of everyone to have their own opinion, but if simply parrots the words of the politicians and punditocracy who use their positions to control the debate, then I reserve the right of dissent.
 -  It's the punditocracy that is taking online betting particularly seriously.
 -  He is at the very top of the conservative punditocracy.
 
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