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newscast

/nooz-kast, -kahst, nyooz-/US // ˈnuzˌkæst, -ˌkɑst, ˈnyuz- //UK // (ˈnjuːzˌkɑːst) //

新闻播报,新闻广播,新闻报道,新闻节目

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a broadcast of news on radio or television.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • What we have to do is build a great newscast… and then eventually people will come to that or they won’t.

  • The most dramatic and violent events were described in newspapers and on newscasts in sentences ending with the words according to police.

  • While at Ohio State University, he scored a job as a writer and producer at one of the three networks that had a 15-minute newscast.

  • Yoto can also play fresh daily episodes, such as the children’s newscast the Daniels family listens to every morning.

  • World News is the only evening newscast to improve on its news demo performance from the previous season compared to NBC and CBS.

  • Winstead insisted that the show would be a newscast written by comedians.

  • On it, a newscast showed images from ongoing clashes in Alexandria, in which the Muslim Brotherhood offices had been torched.

  • “I mean, we started doing puppet news,” the staffer said, recalling a video feature in which puppets anchored a fake newscast.

  • A member of Friends of Forrest, Todd Kiscaden, told a local TV newscast that he thinks Forrest was a hero.

  • The newscast stopped and a commercial called the attention of listeners to the virtues of an anti-allergy pill.

  • So it was that I caught an item in a newscast, probably unheard by most, or smiled aside, if heard.

  • Well, this was brought out in the newscast at the time of his arrest.

  • "We interrupt the program for an important newscast of a sensational development in the Salgath affair," he said.

  • But there isn't a word of truth in that statement you just heard on the Herald-Guardian newscast.