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newsletter

/nooz-let-er, nyooz-/US // ˈnuzˌlɛt ər, ˈnyuz- //UK // (ˈnjuːzˌlɛtə) //

简讯,通讯,简报,新闻通讯

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a written report, issued periodically, typically by a business, institution, or other organization, that presents information and news to people with a specific interest in the organization or subject: our co-op’s monthly newsletter;an employee newsletter.
    • : a written report and analysis of the news, often providing forecasts, typically directed at a special audience, as businesspeople, and distributed to subscribers: a stock-market newsletter.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Perhaps you’ve noticed that it’s Thursday, not Friday, the day you would typically receive this newsletter.

  • Revenue comes from custom content campaigns, podcast and newsletter sponsorship.

  • While the newsletter has nearly 40,000 subscribers, it’s fair to say that posting Q&A’s on a platform like LinkedIn isn’t exactly poised to break the internet the way, say, a YouTube show or a New York Times column might.

  • They are regularly discussing issues related to diversity and inclusion on Slack and in internal newsletters.

  • Because courses newsletters have a lot of growth trajectories, the metrics for success that publishers look for will be different.

  • The first issue ended up being closer to an industry newsletter than an actual magazine.

  • Father Thomas Reese, who writes for National Catholic Reporter, said in a newsletter to journalists that the document is dull.

  • It seemed to me that "Jewish" was what Jews did, and I wrote something to this effect in McGill Hillel's newsletter.

  • To stop subscribing to a Republican newsletter from Charleston.

  • “He is in an impossible position,” says Jon Ralston, who operates an eponymous website and newsletter devoted to Nevada politics.

  • But your newsletter says, that an assay was made of the coin.

  • According to a royalist newsletter, while in the Tower she was threatened with the rack to extort information.

  • But since the Revolution the newsletter had become a more important political engine than it had previously been.

  • That was a memorable day on which the first newsletter from London was laid on the table of the only coffee room in Cambridge.

  • This organization provides a newsletter and emergency news flashes that give extensive information on issues, ideas, and contacts.