Synonym: diarist, diary keeper. Similar words: journalism, journal, nationalism, realistic, naturalist, specialist, turn away, tournament. Meaning: ['dʒɜrnəlɪst /'dʒɜːn-] n. 1. a writer for newspapers and magazines 2. someone who keeps a diary or journal.
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121. At first Harvey, working as a travel journalist, envisaged a fairly conventional feature.
122. But if they tell a journalist, they tell the world how important they are.
123. As he was a thoroughly professional journalist,(http://sentencedict.com/journalist.html) he already knew the media inside out.
124. He was sure no one had noticed him talking to the journalist.
125. He is a television journalist, recently divorced, intelligent, good with women, somewhat lacking in confidence.
126. He worked as a journalist in the 1890s, and took an active role in discussions among liberal and socialist intellectuals.
127. Eluned Price is a freelance journalist based in Oxford and specialising in houses, gardens and their owners.
128. He was the principal architect of the paper's style and the only journalist involved with the original Founders.
129. The newspaper John Hebden worked for had told Dexter the journalist was on holiday and gave out his address in Acton.
130. Santacruz also reportedly ordered the execution of crusading anti-drug journalist Manuel de Dios Unanue in 1992.
131. William Wong is an independent journalist and an Examiner columnist.
132. Despite the model looks and on-air poise[sentencedict.com], the most striking quality of this thirtysomething television journalist is her name.
133. They had two sons, Nicolas, who became a journalist and lecturer, and Jeremy, who became a physicist.
134. An experienced journalist has a sense of what is likely to be relevant about a story.
135. A trade magazine journalist was ordered in the High Court to disclose the source of commercially sensitive information.
136. That's the message to come from a new book on Highgrove co-written by the Prince and environmental journalist, Charles Clover.
137. His thinly disguised hatred of rock-n-roll had made him an unpopular journalist.
138. But there was barely a murmur about his transformation from journalist to political adviser and back.
139. A journalist, who liked traveling, started a new career in her forties as a tour guide.
140. In a separate incident, a journalist, Turan Dursun, was shot and killed on Sept. 4.
141. Among those present was the journalist who, with two Soviet diplomats, had recently been expelled from London.
142. A British journalist was held hostage for over four years.
143. In vain he hoped to carve out an alternative career as a journalist and cricket writer.
144. And Mark Thomas, 37, comedian and de facto investigative journalist, is nothing if not controversial himself.
145. He did not find the day-to-day life of a professional journalist congenial.
146. Rosamund Heartgood, a financial journalist, would be surprised to hear that e-love is alive, let alone well.
147. Since his release a year ago, he has been prevented from working as a journalist.
148. She was thirty-two, an editor with a distinguished publishing house, married to an investigative journalist.
149. After he retired from football he became a sports journalist for the Gazette.
150. Anytime the government sees one of us talking to a journalist, they say that person is a leader.
More similar words: journalism, journal, nationalism, realistic, naturalist, specialist, turn away, tournament, external, internal, mutualism, list, listen, international, enlisted, listen to, listener, alternative, valid, alien, turn, deal in, publisher, publish, turn on, a little, realize, Italian, qualify, turn to.