Newspapers
in sentence
499 examples of Newspapers in a sentence
This picture bears no relation to what we hear in political speeches or read in business
newspapers.
Streets and squares,
newspapers
and literary journals became the ground for free public expression.
Newspapers
published in gigantic numbers.
And, while the people of Japan were grateful for Taiwan’s unexpected generosity, the Japanese government failed to offer any thanks, despite running advertisements in major
newspapers
expressing gratitude for the relief sent from other countries.
Newspapers
and broadcasts were packed with lies.
Since then, his successor, Christine Lagarde, has helped to restore the Fund’s reputation – and to return coverage of its programs and activities to newspapers’ dry and unemotional business sections.
(When I worked at the IMF in the 2000’s, page-three coverage of our events by leading
newspapers
was typically viewed as preferable to top billing.)
The referendum’s outcome has had little effect on the wider global landscape, and the impact on EU institutions is just another crisis to be managed, not the existential implosion that London-centric British
newspapers
imagine.
Powerful national newspapers, such as Adevarul, said that the Hungarian Democratic Union, which has two ministers and several state secretaries in the Ciorbea cabinet, had blackmailed the government.
The Web People, for their part, believe that technology must transform politics and institutions, just as it has transformed newspapers, taxi services, and hotels.
Entertaining gossip has mutated into an assault on privacy, with
newspapers
claiming that any attempt to keep them out of people’s bedrooms is an assault on free speech.
Those events were preceded by a propaganda campaign in which government-controlled newspapers, television stations, and radio broadcasters took part.
One year later, when we published public notices in local
newspapers
of our intention to sue the two corporations, all hell broke loose.
Bush/Gore: There is a DifferenceBOSTON/ROME: Any reader of non-US
newspapers
could draw two conclusions about America’s electoral campaign: 1. that there is little difference between the two candidates; 2. that a mere detail – a slip of the tongue, a false step, a piece of gossip – could decide the election.
They view China as special, a re-emerging great power bound to join the ranks of the world’s most advanced countries, and the governance practices that their
newspapers
cite as models are invariably those of rich societies, not developing ones.
Europe and Its DiscontentsLONDON: Waves of street protests by French farmers, fishermen and truck drivers against surging fuel prices dominate television and
newspapers.
It means not allowing
newspapers
and TV to be hijacked by spurious passions and staged theatrics designed to divert attention from everything else.
Accountants go over the books, the participants tell their tales to the
newspapers
(or sometimes before a judge), politicians explain why they are sorting out a mess, and in the end historians put together a story.
Scary stories sell newspapers, but in truth all of this sniping at the Fed is overdone.
By 1910, according to The Manchester Guardian, “The Jungle Scare” had spread to the United Kingdom, where it had been taken up by “less scrupulous [sic]
newspapers
of this country,” with “slanderous” and “sensational” claims about the food industry.
And the influence that great left-of-center newspapers, like The New York Times, once had has long been eclipsed by radio talk-show hosts, rightwing cable TV stations, tabloid
newspapers
(largely owned by Rupert Murdoch in the English-speaking world), and social media.
The great newspapers, like the great universities, still enjoy a higher status than the more popular press, and the same goes for higher learning.
In the Anglo-Saxon media world, Rupert Murdoch, owner of far too many newspapers, TV stations, and movie studios, is a typical populist tycoon.
NEW YORK – Some of the more hysterical German
newspapers
blamed Germany’s defeat against Italy in the semi-finals of the European championship on the fact that few players bothered to sing the national anthem.
The government owns or controls most of the mass media – the major
newspapers
and television stations – but there is an abundance of mostly marginalized publications and radio stations (to say nothing of the Internet) that retain a remarkable degree of independence.
We are also working on a project along these lines, reaching out to target populations with two-way new media such as the Internet and mobile phones, rather than harangues in
newspapers
and TV.
As Oxford University economist Max Roser points out,
newspapers
could have published the headline, “People in extreme poverty fell by 137,000 since yesterday,” every day for the past 25 years.
“The press lies!” demonstrators shouted in Warsaw and burned Party-controlled
newspapers.
Of course, such advice, like much of
newspapers
themselves nowadays, comes free of charge.
Even Poland’s communist newspapers, read behind bars, somehow conveyed news of the great changes taking place in our neighbor to the south.
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