editorship

IPA: ˈɛdʌtɝʃɪp

noun

  • The position or job of being an editor
Advertisement

Examples of "editorship" in Sentences

  • It cannot be said that his editorship was a success.
  • Cornhill under my editorship was a place of belles-lettres.
  • _Cornhill_ under my editorship was a place of _belles-lettres.
  • At the outset, many friends warned me about the pitfalls of taking on the editorship of such a project.
  • An initially negative report from a referee plus a change in editorship delayed publication until September of 1964.
  • The man who was editing the News of the World when it was closed by Rupert Murdoch, and whose editorship of the Sunday Mirror ended after his paper collapsed a trial, is back – this time at Mort Zuckerman's New York Daily News.
  • Which is to say, he has a record of fine editorship, which is continued on this year; aside from my two books he’s also edited Widdershins by Charles de Lint, Farthing by Jo Walton and The Armies of Memory by John Barnes, among others.
  • It's the first cover of my editorship and if it doesn't provoke any reaction whatsoever – if it was just a nice picture of James Franco looking a bit cool and saying something a bit interesting about his new film – I would have been a bit disappointed and felt like I hadn't done my job.
  • A smaller number include events dating back to the editorship of Rebekah Brooks, who was Coulson's immediate predecessor, and who subsequently became chief executive of News International before her resignation last summer in the wake of revelations about the hacking of a phone belonging to Milly Dowler.

Related Links

synonyms for editorshipdescribing words for editorship
Advertisement
#AaBbCcDdEeFfGgHhIiJjKkLlMmNnOoPpQqRrSsTtUuVvWwXxYyZz

© 2024 Copyright: WordPapa