Similar words: sensationalistic, sensationalize, sensational, rationalisation, nationalisation, rationalism, nationalism, sensation. Meaning: [sen'seɪʃnəlɪzm] n. 1. subject matter that is calculated to excite and please vulgar tastes 2. the journalistic use of subject matter that appeals to vulgar tastes 3. (philosophy) the ethical doctrine that feeling is the only criterion for what is good 4. (philosophy) the doctrine that knowledge derives from experience.
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(1) The report criticises the newspaper for sensationalism.
(2) The newspaper has been accused of sensationalism in its coverage of the murders.
(3) Avoid sensationalism in reporting crime.
(4) It smacks of both sensationalism and trivialisation.
(5) There is so much tabloid sensationalism.
(6) Instead, they settlefor banality, sensationalism and gut prejudice.
(7) The tabloids relied on sensationalism to maintain their circulation.
(8) Chinese Neo - sensationalism was deeply influenced and inherited from Japan Neosensulism.
(9) What does, ironically, veer more towards sensationalism, are the attempts by opponents of climate action to lambast such discussions as opportunistic, to try to shut down the dialogue.
(10) Sensationalism is one aspect of America's bigger-is-better, superlative-crazy culture, one that Graham says has never accepted him, a spindly, self-effacing New Englander who doesn't sugarcoat.
(11) Reminiscence in practice and sensationalism in research break up the history relation of the theories. Sentencedict.com
(12) I feel the sensationalism of sex and violence in the newspaper has bad effects on society.
(13) Already one began to hear the nickname Suicide Langford; but that was either sour grapes or silly sensationalism.
(14) It involves no recourse to sophistry, and it demystifies and strips of sensationalism the termination of the use of artificial support.
(15) It is an interesting topic but unfortunately this particular author abandons scholarship in the interests of sensationalism.
(16) The culture of the country is increasingly enrolled in the junk cults of celebrity, sensationalism and gossip.
(17) In another letter, written that same month, the administrative director of the Owens Foundation, Mary Dykes, who is Delia Owens's sister-in-law, wrote, "ABC was looking for sensationalism.
(18) They were an accident of my distraction and a product of news sensationalism.
(19) American TV tabloid news programs like Hard Copy use sensationalism to attract viewers.
(20) Lurid crimes. At other times it merely refers to glaring and usually unsavory sensationalism.
(21) They all sourced the problem by reference bias historic description with sensationalism.
(22) In addition to the high price, the absence of sensationalism also made newspapers not attractive to the semiliterate working class.
(23) At a time when the network newsmagazines are close to being overrun by tabloid sensationalism.
(24) He took great pains to write on his subject without a trace of sensationalism.
(25) The fourth part is the specific analysis of novels of neo sensationalism, novels of neo sensationalism had built a literature simulacrum of the Shanghai city, so they had a important reference value.
More similar words: sensationalistic, sensationalize, sensational, rationalisation, nationalisation, rationalism, nationalism, sensation, conversationalist, internationalism, sectionalism, factionalism, functionalism, traditionalism, rationalise, rationalist, nationalist, nationalise, nationalistic, constitutionalism, ultranationalist, compensation, dispensation, condensation, regionalism, overcompensation, nationalization, rationalization, professionalism, fictionalization.