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Answer for the clue "Radio announcer answered evasively, with hesitation ", 10 letters:
newsreader

Alternative clues for the word newsreader

Word definitions for newsreader in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
A newsreader is an application program that reads articles on Usenet (a distributed discussion system, which groups its content into a hierarchy of subject-related newsgroups , each of which contains multiple threads or discussions). Newsreaders act as ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 An anchorman in a news program, a news anchor, newscaster. 2 (context computing English) A program for reading and posting to newsgroups.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES ▪ I've always though you have the right voice to be a newsreader . ▪ John Humphrys became a top BBC foreign correspondent, newsreader , and co-presenter of Radio 4's Today programme. EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ But by far the ...

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. someone who reads out broadcast news bulletin [syn: news reader ]

Usage examples of newsreader.

Philip never confessed it, but he had settled for the bleak comfort of hopelessness the moment the voice of a WMTG newsreader coming from the portable radio on his desk had distracted his attention from an elaborate doodle with the announcement that a third name had been definitively added to that of Shane Auslander and Trey Wilk.

They came and they went, sometimes before the newsreaders had even learnt how to pronounce their names properly.

His weaponry included the famous SATAN program (the Security Administer Tool for Analyzing Networks, used by both sysadmins and hackers to check the "hackability" of computer networks), several breaking and entering programs that would let him grab root access on various types of machines and networks, a custom-made Web browser and newsreader, a cloaking program to hide his presence while he was in someone else's computer and which would delete traces of his activities when he logged off, sniffer programs that would "sniff out" - find - user-names, passwords and other helpful information on the Net or in someone's computer, a communications program to send that data back to him, encryption programs and lists of hacker Web sites and anonymizer sites (commercial services that would in effect "launder" e-mails and messages so that the recipient couldn't trace Gillette).

His weaponry included the famous SATAN program (the Security Administer Tool for Analyzing Networks, used by both sysadmins and hackers to check the “hackability” of computer networks), several breaking and entering programs that would let him grab root access on various types of machines and networks, a custom-made Web browser and newsreader, a cloaking program to hide his presence while he was in someone else’s computer and which would delete traces of his activities when he logged off, sniffer programs that would “sniff out” – find – user-names, passwords and other helpful information on the Net or in someone’s computer, a communications program to send that data back to him, encryption programs and lists of hacker Web sites and anonymizer sites (commercial services that would in effect “launder” e-mails and messages so that the recipient couldn’t trace Gillette).