英:['nju:zpɜ:sən]
美:['njuzˌpəsən]
英:['nju:zpɜ:sən]
美:['njuzˌpəsən]
news·per·son
nuz puhr sn
noun
someone involved with gathering or communicating the news, such as a reporter, writer, editor, or broadcaster.
The first known use of newsperson was in 1973
1 I can’t imagine why any newsperson would want to talk to somebody who can only talk through a machine.
2 He added, “If a newsperson is being used to sell tickets, that’s a problem.”
3 Disney bought her program as executives were drawn to Hall’s experience as a newsperson who could think on her feet on live TV.
4 “What she did was make really good choices as a newsperson inside the paper that then made the paper look professional and wise to the outside world.”
5 When I moved to Elizabeth City, North Carolina, to take over management of our family-owned radio station, one of my first initiatives was to hire a full-time local newsperson.
6 She was advised by a station colleague to “sound” like a newsperson — “You know, serious,” she was told.
7 When a legitimate newsperson challenges Trump on nonsense — e.g.
8 “You go tiny newsperson, don’t let them get you down,” one poster wrote on YouTube.
9 Brown, leveraging her longstanding image as a truth-seeking newsperson in service of her new brand as an earnest education reformer, has been indispensable to this effort.
10 The morning after the meeting the superintendent of schools called to ask why our newsperson was there.
11 She began as an intern in Albany, N.Y., and was a newsperson in that bureau for six years, covering state news, government, sports and entertainment.
12 California law does not prevent "newspersons from testifying about criminal activity in which they have participated or which they have observed," the court ruled in a 1975 case involving the Fresno Bee.
13 the host of that morning show prefers to think of himself as a newsperson and not as an entertainer
14 The iconic newsperson died Friday evening her representative Cindi Berger tells PEOPLE.
15 And then, art imitated life when Apple TV+ released The Morning Show, which followed the story of disgraced newsperson Mitch Kessler (Steve Carell), who was ousted by his network for inappropriate relationships with women.
16 Many of the people on our trip sat quietly while the Dutch newsperson translated Walter Cronkite's reporting of the landing.
17 And Trump’s election was the kind of Earth-shattering event that only comes around once or twice in a newsperson’s career.
18 Rhodes would appear, on some level, a perfect choice—a pedigreed newsperson with a history at Fox as well as deep connections in liberal political circles.