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broadcasts
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broadcasts

n. (plural of broadcast English) vb. (en-third-person singular of: broadcast)

Usage examples of "broadcasts".

Ian Hay was cheering up the troops, Belloc was writing articles on strategy, Maurois doing broadcasts, Bairnsfather drawing cartoons.

I believe that the radio, especially in countries where listening-in to foreign broadcasts is not forbidden, is making large-scale lying more and more difficult.

The best known of their broadcasts, indeed the only ones that can be said to have been listened to to any appreciable extent, are those of William Joyce.

We also have some of our broadcasts printed as pamphlets in India and sold for a few annas, a thing that could be useful but is terribly hard to organize in the face of official inertia and obstruction.

Whether these broadcasts should be continued at all is for others to judge, but I myself prefer not to spend my time on them when I could be occupying myself with journalism which does produce some measurable effect.

The essential point was that our literary broadcasts were aimed at the Indian university students, a small and hostile audience, unapproachable by anything that could be described as British propaganda.

These transmissions which we occasionally listen-in to from Delhi are our only clue as to how our own broadcasts sound in India.

The German broadcasts are claiming that Voroshilov is in London, which is not very likely and has not been rumoured here.

A ramen bar Sarah and I had skulked in while the heat from the Gemini Biosys gig died down, eyes hooked to newsnet broadcasts and a corner videophone with a smashed screen that was supposed to ring, any time now.

Endemic to the One-inch-tape Room were enormous pressures, taut nerves, tension, instant decision making and urgent commands, especially just before and during broadcasts of the National Evening News.

White House spokesman, adding to the growing flow of information which clearly would dominate the evening news broadcasts of all networks.

Of the various TV news broadcasts Miguel watched, the one that interested him most was the National Evening News from CBA.

One way to get it is to visit the Museum of Broadcasting here in New York and watch-as I did recentlysome of the old news broadcasts, from the sixties for example.

The regular broadcasts are being wiped and replaced, apparently at the points of transmission.

Whoever or whatever had taken over video broadcasts had also managed to take over remote controls, perhaps by periodically zapping the planet with split-second bursts of infrared radiation.