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词汇 wordsmith
释义

Definition of wordsmith in English:

wordsmith

noun ˈwəːdsmɪθˈwərdˌsmɪθ
  • A skilled user of words.

    词语大师;语言艺术家

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Finding the right wordsmith editor begins with screening applicants with various writing and editing backgrounds.
    • I love listening to sermons, I really admire people who are wordsmiths who can craft words in a way that holds people's attention.
    • She was a prosperous merchant and creative free spirit, a poet and a wordsmith.
    • Milton, who worked as a film critic as well as an agency copywriter, was a wordsmith.
    • No doubt some wordsmiths are busy scribbling for Monday's edition on how we had this coming.
    • Inventive wordsmiths and puzzlists have come up with all sorts of words, sentences, and even paragraphs that have this property.
    • A speech writer is a wordsmith extraordinaire and will work each word and phrase to maximum advantage.
    • All you journalists and wordsmiths out there, it's time to pitch in.
    • This occurs, in part, because prominent writers and wordsmiths appropriate the phrases and repeat them in columns, interviews, and the like, typically without attribution.
    • After all, being the skilled wordsmith that he is, I've no doubt Andrew will be able to convey the sound of the ocean through the written word.
    • He is a wordsmith, a poet, and yet language fails him; through her singing she is able to transmit meaning and emotion.
    • This happens to be precisely what exalts a wordsmith like James Joyce.
    • Composers, linguists, wordsmiths, poets, and all those in a creative sphere are all in their own way pursuing happiness and fulfillment.
    • The importance of words is a conceit of wordsmiths, certainly.
    • No less a wordsmith than Elizabeth Bishop reported that she had had to look up six words in Craft's Chronicle.
    • But then, as academics and wordsmiths we always come back to either spoken or written words to convey what we experience deeply.
    • Every newspaper employs wordsmiths in the newsroom to rewrite breaking news collected by reporters in the field.
    • While journalists generally consider themselves wordsmiths, working with numbers has become an inescapable part of their profession.
    • These wordsmiths include poets, novelists, literary critics, newspaper and magazine journalists, and many professors.
    • Also, one does not necessarily have to be critical or a wordsmith to be a good designer; I doubt the same is true if one wants to be a good critic.
    Synonyms
    writer, feature writer, contributor, journalist, correspondent, newspaperman, newspaperwoman, newsman, newswoman

Definition of wordsmith in US English:

wordsmith

nounˈwərdˌsmiTHˈwərdˌsmɪθ
  • A skilled user of words.

    词语大师;语言艺术家

    Example sentencesExamples
    • A speech writer is a wordsmith extraordinaire and will work each word and phrase to maximum advantage.
    • She was a prosperous merchant and creative free spirit, a poet and a wordsmith.
    • Composers, linguists, wordsmiths, poets, and all those in a creative sphere are all in their own way pursuing happiness and fulfillment.
    • Inventive wordsmiths and puzzlists have come up with all sorts of words, sentences, and even paragraphs that have this property.
    • All you journalists and wordsmiths out there, it's time to pitch in.
    • I love listening to sermons, I really admire people who are wordsmiths who can craft words in a way that holds people's attention.
    • Milton, who worked as a film critic as well as an agency copywriter, was a wordsmith.
    • Finding the right wordsmith editor begins with screening applicants with various writing and editing backgrounds.
    • No less a wordsmith than Elizabeth Bishop reported that she had had to look up six words in Craft's Chronicle.
    • After all, being the skilled wordsmith that he is, I've no doubt Andrew will be able to convey the sound of the ocean through the written word.
    • These wordsmiths include poets, novelists, literary critics, newspaper and magazine journalists, and many professors.
    • But then, as academics and wordsmiths we always come back to either spoken or written words to convey what we experience deeply.
    • This happens to be precisely what exalts a wordsmith like James Joyce.
    • The importance of words is a conceit of wordsmiths, certainly.
    • He is a wordsmith, a poet, and yet language fails him; through her singing she is able to transmit meaning and emotion.
    • Also, one does not necessarily have to be critical or a wordsmith to be a good designer; I doubt the same is true if one wants to be a good critic.
    • No doubt some wordsmiths are busy scribbling for Monday's edition on how we had this coming.
    • This occurs, in part, because prominent writers and wordsmiths appropriate the phrases and repeat them in columns, interviews, and the like, typically without attribution.
    • While journalists generally consider themselves wordsmiths, working with numbers has become an inescapable part of their profession.
    • Every newspaper employs wordsmiths in the newsroom to rewrite breaking news collected by reporters in the field.
    Synonyms
    writer, feature writer, contributor, journalist, correspondent, newspaperman, newspaperwoman, newsman, newswoman
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