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journalist

/jur-nl-ist/US // ˈdʒɜr nl ɪst //UK // (ˈdʒɜːnəlɪst) //

记者,新闻工作者,新闻记者,媒体记者

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a person who practices the occupation or profession of journalism.
    • : a person who keeps a journal, diary, or other record of daily events.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Scott Morris is an investigative journalist based in Oakland, California.

  • Digital tools help civic movements, journalists, and political challengers.

  • We divvied up the design of the individual graphics across our team of visual journalists.

  • It would also impact businesses, journalists, and researchers who equally rely on the platform to do their work with people and entities in China.

  • The agency also collected information on journalists who published leaked documents.

  • I was a journalist in New York City for the last of his three gubernatorial terms, a little more.

  • “He literally went underground to hold services,” Moscow-based dissident and journalist Victor Davidoff said in an email.

  • So, the arrival of a foreign journalist in Belgika merits a town meeting.

  • She arranged for me to meet a student journalist, so that I could tell one of the student newspapers my story.

  • On December 16th, the journalist Barrett Brown will be sentenced before a judge in Dallas, Texas.

  • Play-writing is a luxury to a journalist, as insidious as golf and much more expensive in time and money.

  • Tibbie Birse in the Burial is great, but I think it was a journalist that got in the word “official.”

  • One of these had been a grocer, another a foreman employed by a gas company, and another a journalist.

  • But the American journalist, whatever his taste may be, cannot afford to address himself to so small an audience.

  • Britten was an experienced journalist, and I had most of the necessary instincts for the business.