(noun.) the profession of reporting or photographing or editing news stories for one of the media.
(noun.) newspapers and magazines collectively.
杰拉尔丁校对
双语例句
In that subservience, and not in the meddling of Mr. Morgan, is the reason why American journalism is so flaccid, so repetitious and so dull. 沃尔特·李普曼.政治序论.
Thus we say that a man's interest is politics, or journalism, or philanthropy, or archaeology, or collecting Japanese prints, or banking. 约翰·杜威.民主与教育.
The obvious novelties of machinery and locomotion, phonographs and yellow journalism slake the American thirst for creation pretty thoroughly. 沃尔特·李普曼.政治序论.
By personal experience, by intimate conversations, and by looking about, I think I am pretty well aware of what the influence of business upon journalism amounts to. 沃尔特·李普曼.政治序论.
It was because of that that I abandoned journalism, and took to so much duller work: tutoring and private secretaryship. 伊迪丝·华顿.纯真年代.
And so I have never regretted giving up either diplomacy or journalism--two different forms of the same self-abdication. 伊迪丝·华顿.纯真年代.
He had passed from the medical school to republican journalism in the days of the Empire. 赫伯特·乔治·威尔斯.世界史纲.
Politicians tend to live in character, and many a public figure has come to imitate the journalism which describes him. 沃尔特·李普曼.政治序论.
But he thought you rarely cared for journalism written about a country you really knew about and he respected the man for his intentions. 欧内斯特·海明威.丧钟为谁而鸣.
They do not understand journalism. 马克·吐温.傻子出国记.
A vague common tradition is in the air about us--it expresses itself in journalism, in cheap novels, in the uncritical theater. 沃尔特·李普曼.政治序论.