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词汇 newsmagazine
释义

Definition of newsmagazine in US English:

newsmagazine

nounˈn(j)uzˌmæɡəˌzinˈn(y)o͞ozˌmaɡəˌzēnˈn(j)uzˌmæɡəˌzin
  • 1A periodical, usually published weekly, that reports and comments on current events.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The only real surprise, I thought, was the small number of photos of any kind published by the weekly newsmagazines, which are much more dependent on graphic content than newspapers.
    • Later that year, Kumar published an account of his journeys in the newsmagazine Illustrated Weekly of India.
    • I realize that major newsmagazines have been doing duty as publicists for movies for quite some time, at least since Time put The Godfather, Part II on its cover.
    • With world events sometimes changing by the hour, it is reassuring to know there is a progressive media apparatus that can report on and analyze the rapidly shifting landscape as fast as the mainstream dailies and weekly newsmagazines.
    • In the leftist water in which we all swim, and have swum for half a century, left-liberalism reigns: in media, in academia, in the schools and the newsmagazines.
    • Unlike other award-winning newsmagazines in this country, The Advocate delivers the goods every other week with a shockingly small staff of editors!
    • Just ahead, we'll reveal what's on the cover of this week's major newsmagazines, plus, Bruce Morton's ‘Last Word.’
    • The major newsmagazines put out special issues.
    • She is currently editor-in-chief of ACS's weekly newsmagazine, Chemical & Engineering News, a post she has held since 1995.
    • Traditional print and electronic media outlets aren't all bastions of accuracy and reliability, of course with supermarket tabloids, for instance, employing completely different standards than weekly newsmagazines.
    • But Brown's recording didn't have the emotional shelf life of Jet, a weekly black newsmagazine.
    • We give students copies of opinion columns from local newspapers and national newsmagazines that mislead readers about education in the United States.
    • Its downscaling leaves the market without a major weekly regional newsmagazine.
    • The challenge remains for the different newsmagazines to find a distinctive voice.
    • Through its 100,000-circulation Washington Times, Insight, a weekly newsmagazine, and a host of organizations that it funds, the church has become a major player in conservative politics.
    • A poignant photograph then published in a newsmagazine showed her grieving over the body of her child, who died in the disaster that flattened their village and killed more than 1,400 of its residents.
    • Television will offer continuous day-long coverage, unhindered by commercials, while the newsmagazines and newspapers will bring out their double issues.
    • I hope today that the Joint Chiefs and their commanders in the field are not spending valuable time rebutting the plans and ideas being published in newspapers and newsmagazines.
    • The number of Japanese going abroad annually, approximately 13.6 million as of 1995, was predicted by the weekly newsmagazine to balloon to 30 million by 2005.
    • ‘I used to want to work for one of the newsmagazines,’ she says.
    1. 1.1 A regularly scheduled television news program consisting of short segments on a variety of subjects and featuring a varied format combining interviews, commentary, and entertainment.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • We all gathered in a friendly Irish pub to watch the Massachusetts-based TV newsmagazine Chronicle dedicate a half-hour to the FSP.
      • He hosts ‘NOW’ which is television's smartest newsmagazine and continues to make documentaries.
      • But come next week, he will sign off from ‘Now,’ the weekly PBS newsmagazine he began in 2002, as, at age 70, he retires from television.
      • But I will say this, that I think the television newsmagazines and the regular magazines, they've gotten a lot bolder lately in terms of putting out personal information about celebrities that you would have never seen 10 years ago.
      • And this was not simply a matter for the alternative magazines with small circulations; it was also covered in mainstream papers like The New York Times, The Washington Post, and on several television newsmagazines.
      • The story was picked up by the TV newsmagazine 20 / 20, and Goldstein became the go-to guy on the subject.
      • Primetime newsmagazines have proliferated even as the nightly newscasts have lost some of their luster.
      • The case also gained wide attention when it was featured on the investigative newsmagazine The Fifth Estate (a Canadian version of 60 Minutes).
      • But networks mostly offered soap operas and newsmagazines and held back their popular sitcoms and dramas due to rights issues.
      • Newspapers and TV newsmagazines lapped up the news, decrying a new confidence crisis among American girls.
      • On the television newsmagazine 20 / 20, John Stossel called the biologists who sent the hair ‘zealots.’
      • And 28 percent of women say they're watching more Dateline, 20/20 and other newsmagazines today than they did before the attacks, compared with 18 percent of men.
      • TN Media Senior VP Steve Sternberg hails fewer newsmagazines, fewer cookie-cutter comedies and more distinctive dramas as developments that will ‘get people back from cable.’
      • She arrived at the pinnacle 12 years ago, landing first at NBC Nightly News and later the newsmagazine show Dateline NBC.
      • On the other hand, that kind of money is certainly within the budgets of the major newsmagazine programs on television.
      • Moore was host and executive director of the TV newsmagazine program, TV Nation.
      • Celebrity Justice is a spinoff of the celebrity buzz vehicle Extra - which is itself a copycat of the original entertainment newsmagazine, Entertainment Tonight, or ET as it's known to roughly eight million nightly viewers.
      • Aliens are a common theme both as a dramatic effect in a storyline and as the subject matter of serious newsmagazine programs about scientific exploration and pseudoscience.
      • Of the 100-odd primetime shows that will premiere on the four networks this fall and winter, more than 30-including CBS newsmagazines - will be made by one or another company owned by Viacom.
      • Television newsmagazines have regularly broadcast reports of these invasions of privacy.

Definition of newsmagazine in US English:

newsmagazine

nounˈn(j)uzˌmæɡəˌzinˈn(y)o͞ozˌmaɡəˌzēn
  • 1A periodical, usually published weekly, that reports and comments on current events.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The only real surprise, I thought, was the small number of photos of any kind published by the weekly newsmagazines, which are much more dependent on graphic content than newspapers.
    • Later that year, Kumar published an account of his journeys in the newsmagazine Illustrated Weekly of India.
    • I realize that major newsmagazines have been doing duty as publicists for movies for quite some time, at least since Time put The Godfather, Part II on its cover.
    • With world events sometimes changing by the hour, it is reassuring to know there is a progressive media apparatus that can report on and analyze the rapidly shifting landscape as fast as the mainstream dailies and weekly newsmagazines.
    • In the leftist water in which we all swim, and have swum for half a century, left-liberalism reigns: in media, in academia, in the schools and the newsmagazines.
    • Unlike other award-winning newsmagazines in this country, The Advocate delivers the goods every other week with a shockingly small staff of editors!
    • Just ahead, we'll reveal what's on the cover of this week's major newsmagazines, plus, Bruce Morton's ‘Last Word.’
    • The major newsmagazines put out special issues.
    • She is currently editor-in-chief of ACS's weekly newsmagazine, Chemical & Engineering News, a post she has held since 1995.
    • Traditional print and electronic media outlets aren't all bastions of accuracy and reliability, of course with supermarket tabloids, for instance, employing completely different standards than weekly newsmagazines.
    • But Brown's recording didn't have the emotional shelf life of Jet, a weekly black newsmagazine.
    • We give students copies of opinion columns from local newspapers and national newsmagazines that mislead readers about education in the United States.
    • Its downscaling leaves the market without a major weekly regional newsmagazine.
    • The challenge remains for the different newsmagazines to find a distinctive voice.
    • Through its 100,000-circulation Washington Times, Insight, a weekly newsmagazine, and a host of organizations that it funds, the church has become a major player in conservative politics.
    • A poignant photograph then published in a newsmagazine showed her grieving over the body of her child, who died in the disaster that flattened their village and killed more than 1,400 of its residents.
    • Television will offer continuous day-long coverage, unhindered by commercials, while the newsmagazines and newspapers will bring out their double issues.
    • I hope today that the Joint Chiefs and their commanders in the field are not spending valuable time rebutting the plans and ideas being published in newspapers and newsmagazines.
    • The number of Japanese going abroad annually, approximately 13.6 million as of 1995, was predicted by the weekly newsmagazine to balloon to 30 million by 2005.
    • ‘I used to want to work for one of the newsmagazines,’ she says.
    1. 1.1 A regularly scheduled television news program consisting of short segments on a variety of subjects and featuring a varied format combining interviews, commentary, and entertainment.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • We all gathered in a friendly Irish pub to watch the Massachusetts-based TV newsmagazine Chronicle dedicate a half-hour to the FSP.
      • He hosts ‘NOW’ which is television's smartest newsmagazine and continues to make documentaries.
      • But come next week, he will sign off from ‘Now,’ the weekly PBS newsmagazine he began in 2002, as, at age 70, he retires from television.
      • But I will say this, that I think the television newsmagazines and the regular magazines, they've gotten a lot bolder lately in terms of putting out personal information about celebrities that you would have never seen 10 years ago.
      • And this was not simply a matter for the alternative magazines with small circulations; it was also covered in mainstream papers like The New York Times, The Washington Post, and on several television newsmagazines.
      • The story was picked up by the TV newsmagazine 20 / 20, and Goldstein became the go-to guy on the subject.
      • Primetime newsmagazines have proliferated even as the nightly newscasts have lost some of their luster.
      • The case also gained wide attention when it was featured on the investigative newsmagazine The Fifth Estate (a Canadian version of 60 Minutes).
      • But networks mostly offered soap operas and newsmagazines and held back their popular sitcoms and dramas due to rights issues.
      • Newspapers and TV newsmagazines lapped up the news, decrying a new confidence crisis among American girls.
      • On the television newsmagazine 20 / 20, John Stossel called the biologists who sent the hair ‘zealots.’
      • And 28 percent of women say they're watching more Dateline, 20/20 and other newsmagazines today than they did before the attacks, compared with 18 percent of men.
      • TN Media Senior VP Steve Sternberg hails fewer newsmagazines, fewer cookie-cutter comedies and more distinctive dramas as developments that will ‘get people back from cable.’
      • She arrived at the pinnacle 12 years ago, landing first at NBC Nightly News and later the newsmagazine show Dateline NBC.
      • On the other hand, that kind of money is certainly within the budgets of the major newsmagazine programs on television.
      • Moore was host and executive director of the TV newsmagazine program, TV Nation.
      • Celebrity Justice is a spinoff of the celebrity buzz vehicle Extra - which is itself a copycat of the original entertainment newsmagazine, Entertainment Tonight, or ET as it's known to roughly eight million nightly viewers.
      • Aliens are a common theme both as a dramatic effect in a storyline and as the subject matter of serious newsmagazine programs about scientific exploration and pseudoscience.
      • Of the 100-odd primetime shows that will premiere on the four networks this fall and winter, more than 30-including CBS newsmagazines - will be made by one or another company owned by Viacom.
      • Television newsmagazines have regularly broadcast reports of these invasions of privacy.
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