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词汇 newsie
释义

Definition of newsie in English:

newsie

(US newsy)
nounPlural newsies ˈnjuːziˈn(j)uzi
US informal
  • 1A reporter.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • We newsies are not good at restraint on such occasions.
    • He stalked across the street, ignoring the catcalls of the local newsies in regard to his clothing.
    • In the Lateline version, there is nothing political at work: Tangled Banners is a sex-filled Peyton Place with newsies.
    • The voters, I'll bet, would want the candidates to - and us newsies to - write about real stuff.
    • Websites from Poynter, Assignment Editor, CyberJournalist and many others pulled together to help out our fellow newsies.
    • It's better to let the newsies extinctify themselves on their own terms, freeing up the slot - and then pop the bubbly.
    • We newsies seemed to have rediscovered normality.
    • For Seattleites, the top story (at least on the radio) is local newsies reporting on their own presence at the investigation scene in Tacoma, where a tree trunk used for target practice was hauled away yesterday.
    • The Chief told newsies that the stickee, Jerry Brown, and the sticker, one Timothy Newman, had been barhopping and were more than a tiny bit anesthetized when they got into a fistfight about who-knows-what, and Jerry won.
    • And why do you think the cable newsies and entertainment hypocrites spent so much time covering this story?
    • Take Bloggers and other newsies in North America and you could bury the other shows with ratings.
    • Bill Pullman is the film's one pleasant surprise, nicely underplaying reporter and newsie advocate Bryan Denton and providing the film's few precious moments of calm.
    • Journalism is becoming badly degraded, when we can hardly tell the difference between straight newsies and opinionists (like me).
    • But will Ireland's newsies catch on, or is blogging a foreign game?
    • The other newsies had as well and were quite tickled by her comment.
    • That response satisfied the newsies, and probably solidified Capuano's helpful positioning as a pragmatic moderate in a left-heavy field.
    • Later, a spokesman for the legendary soccer player told newsies that Pele simply took off his cap, leaned forward where the gunmen could see him, and the robbery deflated instantly.
    • Two hired carriages carried a delegation of newsies to Mount Olivet Cemetery on Long Island, where Charity's body was interred in a private plot.
    • It's a CNN news interview with witnesses and newsies.
    1. 1.1 A person who sells or delivers newspapers.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The Brooklyn newsies were out hawking the headlines, and with the snow and the cold were most likely to be in a sour mood.
      • Tomorrow the Captain will probably have all the newsies sign the contract, and then it should be smooth sailing for us all.
      • Her final waking came with the cry of a newsie outside of the building hawking the headline in a most annoying fashion.
      • When they entered it was full of cold wet newsies trying to get warmed up.
      • She dashed in that direction, stumbling over people's feet and nearly knocking over a stack of newspapers that some local newsie was selling.
      • They attacked the street trades for nearly opposite reasons: children who worked on the streets as newsies, bootblacks, peddlers or messengers were given too much freedom and stimulation.
      • These included: cleanliness, tenement house reform, eliminating vices such as prostitution and ending child labor, especially newsies.
      • While proper children dined regularly, the newsies gobbled snacks of doughnuts or hotdogs washed down with large bowls of coffee.

Definition of newsie in US English:

newsie

(US newsy)
nounˈn(j)uziˈn(y)o͞ozē
US informal
  • 1A reporter.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The voters, I'll bet, would want the candidates to - and us newsies to - write about real stuff.
    • For Seattleites, the top story (at least on the radio) is local newsies reporting on their own presence at the investigation scene in Tacoma, where a tree trunk used for target practice was hauled away yesterday.
    • That response satisfied the newsies, and probably solidified Capuano's helpful positioning as a pragmatic moderate in a left-heavy field.
    • We newsies seemed to have rediscovered normality.
    • Websites from Poynter, Assignment Editor, CyberJournalist and many others pulled together to help out our fellow newsies.
    • It's a CNN news interview with witnesses and newsies.
    • And why do you think the cable newsies and entertainment hypocrites spent so much time covering this story?
    • Two hired carriages carried a delegation of newsies to Mount Olivet Cemetery on Long Island, where Charity's body was interred in a private plot.
    • The other newsies had as well and were quite tickled by her comment.
    • Take Bloggers and other newsies in North America and you could bury the other shows with ratings.
    • Bill Pullman is the film's one pleasant surprise, nicely underplaying reporter and newsie advocate Bryan Denton and providing the film's few precious moments of calm.
    • The Chief told newsies that the stickee, Jerry Brown, and the sticker, one Timothy Newman, had been barhopping and were more than a tiny bit anesthetized when they got into a fistfight about who-knows-what, and Jerry won.
    • It's better to let the newsies extinctify themselves on their own terms, freeing up the slot - and then pop the bubbly.
    • He stalked across the street, ignoring the catcalls of the local newsies in regard to his clothing.
    • Journalism is becoming badly degraded, when we can hardly tell the difference between straight newsies and opinionists (like me).
    • Later, a spokesman for the legendary soccer player told newsies that Pele simply took off his cap, leaned forward where the gunmen could see him, and the robbery deflated instantly.
    • We newsies are not good at restraint on such occasions.
    • In the Lateline version, there is nothing political at work: Tangled Banners is a sex-filled Peyton Place with newsies.
    • But will Ireland's newsies catch on, or is blogging a foreign game?
    1. 1.1 A person who sells or delivers newspapers.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • These included: cleanliness, tenement house reform, eliminating vices such as prostitution and ending child labor, especially newsies.
      • The Brooklyn newsies were out hawking the headlines, and with the snow and the cold were most likely to be in a sour mood.
      • She dashed in that direction, stumbling over people's feet and nearly knocking over a stack of newspapers that some local newsie was selling.
      • They attacked the street trades for nearly opposite reasons: children who worked on the streets as newsies, bootblacks, peddlers or messengers were given too much freedom and stimulation.
      • When they entered it was full of cold wet newsies trying to get warmed up.
      • While proper children dined regularly, the newsies gobbled snacks of doughnuts or hotdogs washed down with large bowls of coffee.
      • Tomorrow the Captain will probably have all the newsies sign the contract, and then it should be smooth sailing for us all.
      • Her final waking came with the cry of a newsie outside of the building hawking the headline in a most annoying fashion.
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