journal
noun OPAL S
/ˈdʒɜːnl/
/ˈdʒɜːrnl/
- a scientific/an academic journal
- the British Medical Journal
- the Journal of Experimental Psychology
- a trade/professional/specialist journal
- an online journal
- a journal article
- in a journal The results of the study are expected to be published in a peer-reviewed journal next month.
Extra ExamplesTopics Literature and writingb1, TV, radio and newsb1, Scientific researchb1- He founded a new literary journal in 1831.
- She subscribes to quite a few academic journals.
- The journal comes out five times a year.
- The paper was published in an obscure medical journal.
- the house journal of Southern Gas
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- academic
- learned
- scholarly
- …
- copy
- edition
- issue
- …
- read
- edit
- write for
- …
- come out
- be dedicated to
- be devoted to
- …
- article
- editorial
- editor
- …
- in a/the journal
- journal of
- used in the title of some newspapers
- the Wall Street Journal
- He kept a journal of his travels across Asia.
- I'm keeping a food journal for a school science project.
- Her journal entry for that day describes a thunderstorm.
Extra Examples- Lady Franklin kept a daily journal of the voyage.
- The Captain later published his journals.
- ‘I think we're being bugged’, he wrote in his journal.
- Queen Victoria's journal is regarded as an important historical record.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- personal
- private
- daily
- …
- keep
- write
- read
- …
- entry
- in a/the journal
- journal of
Word Originlate Middle English (originally denoting a book containing the appointed times of daily prayers): from Old French jurnal, from late Latin diurnalis, from Latin diurnus ‘daily’, from dies ‘day’.