Wiktionary
n. (news agency English)
Usage examples of "news agencies".
And so, the black-and-white video was released to CNN, Sky News, and other interested news agencies for broadcast around the world, to give substance to the commentary of various reporters who'd assembled at Worldpark's main gate, there to comment at great and erroneous length about the expertise of the Guardia Civil's special action team dispatched from Madrid to resolve this hateful episode at one of the world's great theme parks.
The treaty terms had still not been leaked, and news agencies, knowing that something 'historic' had happened, were frantic to discover exactly what it was.
SPOT, the French corporation which operated commercial photosatellites, had received numerous requests for photos of Siberia, and while many of them came from seemingly legitimate western businesses, mainly news agencies, all had been summarily denied.
Hanging up, she looked at the television monitor one more time, then at the computer screen, before scribbling the first thing that came to her mind based on the information that she had pulled from the news stories from other news agencies.
They went in Telemann's aircar, fitted out for Public Information Operation, which is to say crammed with electronic gear to monitor news agencies' activities.
Imperial HoloVision is one of the largest, most powerful news agencies in the galaxy.
The great news agencies like United Faxes Intragalactic, Reuters of Beowulf, and the Interstellar News Service, all headquartered in the Solarian League, were bad enough, but at least restricted access and alert security could limit the damage they did.
The great news agencies like United Faxes Intragalactic, Reuters of Beowulf, and the Interstellar News Service—.
The videotape of the event which was sold to Western news agencies for an enormous sum by the Soviet government was exquisitely detailed, so much so that it was deemed a masterpiece of special effects by the cinI wizards of Industrial Light and Magic.
As may be imagined, K devotes its not inconsiderable labors to keeping track of the huge number of Soviet and satellite agents who operate, or try to, out of the various embassies, consulates, legations, trade missions, banks, news agencies, and commercial enterprises that a lenient British government has allowed to be scattered all over the capital and (in the case of consulates) the provinces.
Their respec-tive comments on German radio and television were picked up by the news agencies and Germany-based correspondents and given wider coverage.