Journalism
['dʒɜːn(ə)lɪz(ə)m] or ['dʒɝnl'ɪzəm]
解释:
(noun.) the profession of reporting or photographing or editing news stories for one of the media.
(noun.) newspapers and magazines collectively.
杰拉尔丁校对--From WordNet
解释:
(n.) The keeping of a journal or diary.
(n.) The periodical collection and publication of current news; the business of managing, editing, or writing for, journals or newspapers; as, political journalism.
比安卡手打
例句:
- In that subservience, and not in the meddling of Mr. Morgan, is the reason why American journalism is so flaccid, so repetitious and so dull. 沃尔特·李普曼. 政治序论.
- Thus we say that a man's interest is politics, or journalism, or philanthropy, or archaeology, or collecting Japanese prints, or banking. 约翰·杜威. 民主与教育.
- The obvious novelties of machinery and locomotion, phonographs and yellow journalism slake the American thirst for creation pretty thoroughly. 沃尔特·李普曼. 政治序论.
- By personal experience, by intimate conversations, and by looking about, I think I am pretty well aware of what the influence of business upon journalism amounts to. 沃尔特·李普曼. 政治序论.
- It was because of that that I abandoned journalism, and took to so much duller work: tutoring and private secretaryship. 伊迪丝·华顿. 纯真年代.
- And so I have never regretted giving up either diplomacy or journalism--two different forms of the same self-abdication. 伊迪丝·华顿. 纯真年代.
- He had passed from the medical school to republican journalism in the days of the Empire. 赫伯特·乔治·威尔斯. 世界史纲.
- Politicians tend to live in character, and many a public figure has come to imitate the journalism which describes him. 沃尔特·李普曼. 政治序论.
- But he thought you rarely cared for journalism written about a country you really knew about and he respected the man for his intentions. 欧内斯特·海明威. 丧钟为谁而鸣.
- They do not understand journalism. 马克·吐温. 傻子出国记.
- A vague common tradition is in the air about us--it expresses itself in journalism, in cheap novels, in the uncritical theater. 沃尔特·李普曼. 政治序论.
编辑:路易斯