newsroom

IPA: nˈuzrum

noun

  • The office of a news organisation, especially that part of it where the journalists work and news stories are processed.
  • (dated) A room where newspapers and magazines are available for reading.
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Examples of "newsroom" in Sentences

  • Its newsroom is considered the most modern in Europe.
  • Or rather, what if the newsroom is the community and the community is the newsroom.
  • Increasingly, the newsroom is perceived as the more innovative and experimental part of the news industry.
  • Over at the Washington Post, an editor named Marie Arana criticized her own paper saying: The elephant in the newsroom is our narrowness.
  • No one wants a real iconoclast making everyone uncomfortable, and if everyone in the newsroom is anti-gun, NRA members are not going to be welcome.
  • ** UPDATE 10/30/10*** Greg Sargent reports that ABC's newsroom is upset over the network's decision to tap Andrew Breitbart for election-night analysis:
  • One of the flicks we're all very excited for here in the newsroom is "Buried," the Ryan Reynolds-driven -- it's a one-man show, and he's it -- story of a military contractor in Iraq who is kidnapped and buried alive with nothing more than a phone, a lighter and orders to raise $5 million for his captors.

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synonyms for newsroomdescribing words for newsroom
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