newscasting / ˈnuzˌkæst, -ˌkɑst, ˈnyuz- /

新闻播报新闻播送新闻广播播报

newscasting 的定义

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

newscasting 近义词

newscasting

等同于 broadcasting

newscasting

等同于 reporting

更多newscasting例句

  1. What we have to do is build a great newscast… and then eventually people will come to that or they won’t.
  2. The most dramatic and violent events were described in newspapers and on newscasts in sentences ending with the words according to police.
  3. 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.
  4. Yoto can also play fresh daily episodes, such as the children’s newscast the Daniels family listens to every morning.
  5. World News is the only evening newscast to improve on its news demo performance from the previous season compared to NBC and CBS.
  6. Winstead insisted that the show would be a newscast written by comedians.
  7. On it, a newscast showed images from ongoing clashes in Alexandria, in which the Muslim Brotherhood offices had been torched.
  8. “I mean, we started doing puppet news,” the staffer said, recalling a video feature in which puppets anchored a fake newscast.
  9. A member of Friends of Forrest, Todd Kiscaden, told a local TV newscast that he thinks Forrest was a hero.
  10. The newscast stopped and a commercial called the attention of listeners to the virtues of an anti-allergy pill.
  11. So it was that I caught an item in a newscast, probably unheard by most, or smiled aside, if heard.
  12. Well, this was brought out in the newscast at the time of his arrest.
  13. "We interrupt the program for an important newscast of a sensational development in the Salgath affair," he said.
  14. But there isn't a word of truth in that statement you just heard on the Herald-Guardian newscast.