| 释义 | 
		Definition of newsroom in English: newsroomnounˈnjuːzruːmˈnjuːzrʊm The area in a newspaper or broadcasting office where news is processed.  Example sentencesExamples -  They go on all the time in newsrooms and editorial offices - or if they don't, they should.
 -  There is a general understanding that what goes on in the newsroom stays in the newsroom.
 -  Other newspapers have formed them for both newsrooms and for editorial boards.
 -  The 20-year quest for parity in the number of journalists of color in newsrooms had failed.
 -  If you truly want a diverse newsroom and copy desk, you've got to do some searching.
 -  Reporters in newsrooms from Anchorage to Philadelphia signed on as well.
 -  The best journalists and newsrooms are ready for these moments and they are adept at applying their guiding principles.
 -  The great divide between the word people and the visual people is nothing new in newspaper newsrooms.
 -  How many communities are still getting their news from all-white newsrooms?
 -  This may be the next step and part of a research agenda for further investigation of Web use in news media newsrooms.
 -  The report catalogued a striking decline in the number of journalists employed in American newsrooms.
 -  While women are the majority sex at campus newspapers men dominate in professional newsrooms.
 -  Twenty-two percent of women working in newsrooms are on the copy desk, which has been true for the past three years.
 -  Forces outside of newspaper and TV newsrooms have already decided that she will be known to the public.
 -  If you have one, update it in light of lessons learned from newsrooms in the outage area.
 -  Will online, print and broadcast newsrooms creatively adopt these technologies as reporting tools?
 -  I look around at the other mid-level managers and top editors in my newsroom and other newsrooms.
 -  Often the trainees have Monday in the classroom and the rest of the week in newsrooms or simulated subediting.
 -  The woman patched her through to the newsroom, where a reporter answered the phone.
 -  Plus, after ten years in newspaper newsrooms, I actually work better when there are other people around.
 
    Definition of newsroom in US English: newsroomnoun The area in a newspaper or broadcasting office where news is written and edited.  Example sentencesExamples -  Forces outside of newspaper and TV newsrooms have already decided that she will be known to the public.
 -  The best journalists and newsrooms are ready for these moments and they are adept at applying their guiding principles.
 -  The report catalogued a striking decline in the number of journalists employed in American newsrooms.
 -  They go on all the time in newsrooms and editorial offices - or if they don't, they should.
 -  While women are the majority sex at campus newspapers men dominate in professional newsrooms.
 -  There is a general understanding that what goes on in the newsroom stays in the newsroom.
 -  This may be the next step and part of a research agenda for further investigation of Web use in news media newsrooms.
 -  Plus, after ten years in newspaper newsrooms, I actually work better when there are other people around.
 -  Other newspapers have formed them for both newsrooms and for editorial boards.
 -  The great divide between the word people and the visual people is nothing new in newspaper newsrooms.
 -  How many communities are still getting their news from all-white newsrooms?
 -  If you have one, update it in light of lessons learned from newsrooms in the outage area.
 -  If you truly want a diverse newsroom and copy desk, you've got to do some searching.
 -  Twenty-two percent of women working in newsrooms are on the copy desk, which has been true for the past three years.
 -  The 20-year quest for parity in the number of journalists of color in newsrooms had failed.
 -  Will online, print and broadcast newsrooms creatively adopt these technologies as reporting tools?
 -  The woman patched her through to the newsroom, where a reporter answered the phone.
 -  Often the trainees have Monday in the classroom and the rest of the week in newsrooms or simulated subediting.
 -  I look around at the other mid-level managers and top editors in my newsroom and other newsrooms.
 -  Reporters in newsrooms from Anchorage to Philadelphia signed on as well.
 
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