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Blitzer, e.g
Answer for the clue "Blitzer, e.g ", 7 letters:
newsman
Alternative clues for the word newsman
Word definitions for newsman in dictionaries
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ A throng of newsmen, accompanied by their photographers, left the hall in pursuit of the vanished Amaranth. ▪ A throng of politicians, newsmen, brokers, and Army officers stood in front of the counters that encircled it. ▪ Adds ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. (context US English) A reporter; a person in the profession of providing news.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Newsman \News"man\, n.; pl. Newsmen . One who brings news. [Obs.] --Spenser. A man who distributes or sells newspapers.
Usage examples of newsman.
The father she claimed for him was a highsider newsman who had come to do a story on her and stayed in Azteca as her manager and lover.
Carr, but go and ring one of your ministers and tell him that you have a murder which will, tomorrow, bring the Venezuelan consul, a rich family in Caracas, quite possibly the Republica and most certainly some American newsmen from Miami all asking awkward questions.
A few minutes later, Karl lifted the centerboard, while the newsman eased the bow up onto the beach with as effortless a skill as Steve had ever seen.
In his Windsor speech the next day he accused newsmen of slanting their reports of the Charlottetown meeting, and declared that the real attendance figure there had been 4,400.
His fists were clenched so tight he could feel the nails driving into his palms, but he made himself smile frostily at the two newsmen.
Looking hastily about the darkened room to see if any newsmen had witnessed the sexual charade, he was relieved to find that all of them were absent, attending a briefing at the Cape regarding the impending second Gemini shot in which the popular Edward White was going to walk in space.
Murrow, the celebrated CBS newsman, and Kenneth Arnold, a civilian pilot who saw something peculiar near Mount Rainier in the state of Washington on 24 June 1947 and who in a way coined the phrase.
The newsmen clambered on board, billfolds coming out as soon as they settled.
He made the usual disclaimers regarding the swastikas and Iron Crosses ( That don't mean nothin, we buy that stuff in dime stores ), but just about the time the man seemed satisfied that it was all a rude put-on, Barger unloaded one of those jarring ad libs that have made him a favorite among Bay area newsmen.
His testimony at the inquest sounded perfectly logical and so finely informed that it was hard to understand how such a prominent extroverted witness could possibly have escaped being quoted -- or at least mentioned-- by the dozens of newsmen, investigators and assorted tipsters with access to the Salazar story.
The sight of the chubby newsman bumbling into obvious traps and getting tangled in pulleys and inclined planes with bowling balls atop them, while Leoh solicitously urged him to be careful every step of the way, struck most people as funny.
The newsmen stood it for some time, those who operated by sound recording it and the writers noting it as local color.
In fact, he had the clear but colorless diction of local television newsmen in the Middle Atlantic States.
Sanforth was still trying mightily to shoo out the remaining newsmen, and the unfortunate assistant chief of protocol, deserted by his boss, was jittering like a nervous baby-sitter in his attempt to play musical chairs with too few chairs and too many notables, They continued to come in and Jubal concluded that Douglas had never intended to convene this public meeting earlier than eleven o'clock, and that everyone else had been so informed-the earlier hour given Jubal was to permit the private preconference that Douglas had demanded and that Jubal had refused.
Qwilleran said with the casual air of authority that comes easily to a newsman after three days on a new beat.