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词汇 anchorperson
释义

Definition of anchorperson in English:

anchorperson

nounPlural anchorpeople, Plural anchorpersonsˈaŋkəpəːs(ə)nˈæŋkərˌpərs(ə)n
  • An anchorman or anchorwoman.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • By giving him Walter Cronkite's desk, CBS turned a dangerous reporter into a usually-safe anchorperson.
    • But I can't sit here and say to you that a person who's a good reader might make it as an anchorperson someplace else.
    • The anchorperson helpfully informs us that this violates the Geneva Accords.
    • At one point, the anchorperson said, ‘Up next, some other world news that nobody much cares about.’
    • The staff and anchorpeople come from different Arab countries, and only one anchorwoman wears the hijab (and she did so after working for years without it) - not that this matters but I know how obsessed Westerners are with the ‘veil’.
    • While people tend to say the anchor was on for 17 hours and did a good or bad job, what the anchorperson did is important, but what I did is a byproduct of the news division
    • For Kysa and Derwin Daniels of Conyers, Georgia, the downpour came last Thanksgiving when Kysa, 35, lost her job as an overnight anchorperson at CNN Headline News in Atlanta.
    • You know, someone who's as attractive as Peter, you know, quintessential look of an anchorperson, it sometimes is difficult - and I think it was difficult in Peter's case - to have people know where your heart is.
    • To bring in additional money, Nicholas kept his job as an early-morning anchorperson while his wife, Arita, who is the company's president and CEO, ran the business.
    • ‘No,’ she said, clearly talking to the unseen anchorperson back in the studio.
    • A programme's success depends on the anchorperson and often it's the anchor who is remembered by the audience long after the programme is off the air.
    • The reporter was talking to the anchorperson and said the Ames strain of this anthrax is resistant to vaccine, the anthrax vaccine.
    • The media anchorpeople will run up to you and ask groundbreaking questions such as ‘do you know anything new about the status of your child?’
    • That's why, dare I say, the anchorperson has always got to stand back, even at the risk of seeming a little cold-blooded at times, so as not to impose our emotions on others.
    • And a 60-year-old anchorperson might not be the thing that they want to see.
    • Hinting on pressures and propaganda from other quarters, he gives the lowdown on his daily challenges which he has to face as a television anchorperson and a minister.
    • The news anchorperson was speaking in a controlled yet incredulous manner totally stunned by the occurrence as he reported on it.
    • The pace quickens in a scene featuring press agents (or are they anchorpersons?) who circle the gallery walls with dizzying speed, their interchangeable faces and messages flying from one screen to the next.
    • ‘It was a great feeling being an anchorperson and reading out the news bulletin,’ said a 16-year-old girl from Kalyanam, who would like to be a newsreader when she grows up.
    • For the majority, listening to the live broadcast of the conversation with Chun Zi and another two anchorpersons, Ye Sha and Yu Chen, eases their stress of insomnia.

Definition of anchorperson in US English:

anchorperson

nounˈaNGkərˌpərs(ə)nˈæŋkərˌpərs(ə)n
  • An anchorman or anchorwoman (used as a neutral alternative).

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The reporter was talking to the anchorperson and said the Ames strain of this anthrax is resistant to vaccine, the anthrax vaccine.
    • To bring in additional money, Nicholas kept his job as an early-morning anchorperson while his wife, Arita, who is the company's president and CEO, ran the business.
    • That's why, dare I say, the anchorperson has always got to stand back, even at the risk of seeming a little cold-blooded at times, so as not to impose our emotions on others.
    • For the majority, listening to the live broadcast of the conversation with Chun Zi and another two anchorpersons, Ye Sha and Yu Chen, eases their stress of insomnia.
    • But I can't sit here and say to you that a person who's a good reader might make it as an anchorperson someplace else.
    • The anchorperson helpfully informs us that this violates the Geneva Accords.
    • A programme's success depends on the anchorperson and often it's the anchor who is remembered by the audience long after the programme is off the air.
    • ‘No,’ she said, clearly talking to the unseen anchorperson back in the studio.
    • ‘It was a great feeling being an anchorperson and reading out the news bulletin,’ said a 16-year-old girl from Kalyanam, who would like to be a newsreader when she grows up.
    • The staff and anchorpeople come from different Arab countries, and only one anchorwoman wears the hijab (and she did so after working for years without it) - not that this matters but I know how obsessed Westerners are with the ‘veil’.
    • The news anchorperson was speaking in a controlled yet incredulous manner totally stunned by the occurrence as he reported on it.
    • For Kysa and Derwin Daniels of Conyers, Georgia, the downpour came last Thanksgiving when Kysa, 35, lost her job as an overnight anchorperson at CNN Headline News in Atlanta.
    • While people tend to say the anchor was on for 17 hours and did a good or bad job, what the anchorperson did is important, but what I did is a byproduct of the news division
    • And a 60-year-old anchorperson might not be the thing that they want to see.
    • At one point, the anchorperson said, ‘Up next, some other world news that nobody much cares about.’
    • You know, someone who's as attractive as Peter, you know, quintessential look of an anchorperson, it sometimes is difficult - and I think it was difficult in Peter's case - to have people know where your heart is.
    • By giving him Walter Cronkite's desk, CBS turned a dangerous reporter into a usually-safe anchorperson.
    • The media anchorpeople will run up to you and ask groundbreaking questions such as ‘do you know anything new about the status of your child?’
    • The pace quickens in a scene featuring press agents (or are they anchorpersons?) who circle the gallery walls with dizzying speed, their interchangeable faces and messages flying from one screen to the next.
    • Hinting on pressures and propaganda from other quarters, he gives the lowdown on his daily challenges which he has to face as a television anchorperson and a minister.
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