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Answer for the clue "Journalist's milieu ", 8 letters:
newsroom

Alternative clues for the word newsroom

Word definitions for newsroom in dictionaries

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ I often felt more inspired writing in a tearoom than in the newsroom . ▪ In the newsroom , Bernstein and Woodward waited for the first edition of the afternoon Washington Star-News to arrive. ▪ The newsroom was minuscule, not ...

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Newsroom was the BBC2 channel's main news programme during the 1960s and early 1970s. The programme began on the day BBC2 started transmission, 20 April 1964 and continued until 1973. The programme was initially broadcast late at night (after 10.30pm) but ...

Usage examples of newsroom.

Television viewers watching Sloane during a broadcast had the illusion that the anchorman was in, and part of, the newsroom.

Somewhere in the tangled depths of the half-dark newsroom a copyboy was whistlingone of those high-pitched, jerky tunes that are no tunes at all.

Once the daily coffee battle between Lightning and the copydesk had taken place, one knew the place was grooved, that the newsroom at last had slipped into high gear.

The NLGJA stylebook is already in widespread use in newsrooms around the country.

You think the president of any of the network news divisions would let that kind of stylebook within a million miles of his newsroom?

As the speakerphone fell silent, Partridge was first out, on the run, hurrying to the newsroom one floor below, with Rita Abrams close behind.

It was with some relief, therefore, that he saw a Big Foot correspondent, Harry Partridge, and a senior producer, Abrams, burst into the newsroom and hurry his way.

One floor above the newsroom, senior producers at the Horseshoe paused to listen.

When the announcement of a possible Lawrence candidacy was posted in our newsroom Tuesday, the first reaction was incredulity.

Big Cheese around the newsroom, I ought to be circumspect about this bizarre situation.

To avoid working on MacArthur Polk's obituary, I busy myself in the newsroom by scrolling up the many bylines of Emma's father on the International Herald Tribune's database.

On the morning Cleo was convicted, I walked into the newsroom and asked Emma to fire me.

The old days, phones in a newsroom never quit ringing even after the final edition was put to bed.

They got in their cars and drove on freeways, smoking cigarettes and holding high-energy radio transmitters against their heads, in order to get to newsrooms where they were greatly concerned to find out if they were in danger from microbacteria locked away behind triple hermetic seals in Houston.

He called the newsroom and learned from Hubbell that Rooney was threatening to quit, that their Sunday editorial about the ski basin had produced indignant telephone calls, that the Ford dealer on the school board was threatening to pull his advertising if the sports editor didn't lay off the football coach, that nothing much was happening on the vacation edition, and that they'd had an electrical fire in the darkroom and were farming out their photo printing until the rewiring was done.