Newspapers
in sentence
499 examples of Newspapers in a sentence
Newspapers
the next day described it as “one of the severest declines the market has ever gone through,” and “the worst money scare since July 1, 1920.”
I wondered what people were really thinking, apart from what could be read in the
newspapers.
This, and a more elaborate questionnaire that I sent out after the next “Black Monday” crash on October 19, 1987, convinced me that nothing more sensible is occurring than just what
newspapers
describe: speculators, responding to changing market prices, and fearing further changes in the same direction, simply decide to bail out.
Murdoch’s
newspapers
and television networks might as well have patented the recipe for the deceitful, dog-whistle politics that powered Trump’s rise and the Brexit vote.
Previously, readers could easily distinguish between non-credible sources, like the colorful and sensational tabloids in the checkout line at the supermarket, and credible ones, such as longstanding local or national
newspapers.
Letters to the editors of
newspapers
used to be carefully screened, to prevent haters and cranks from getting public exposure.
Serious magazines, general-interest journals, and
newspapers
traditionally filled the space between the ether of peer-reviewed journals and the deep sea of hoaxes; yet they all struggle to survive the digital revolution.
It is a big problem, for the standard sources that I was taught as a child to rely upon –
newspapers
and television news – are breaking down.
The food sections of urban
newspapers
that, five years ago, would have covered the latest fusion cuisine, now run dreamy profiles of the guy with the Ivy League degree who has stepped off the grid, and done fine for himself by starting a line of homemade pickles.
Privately owned newspapers, independent radio and television networks, trade unions, churches, professional societies, and other groups within civil society provide a bulwark against despotism.
But they did not hesitate to use the power of the state to perpetuate themselves in power, harassing opposition newspapers, manipulating judicial investigations, and abolishing the independence of the central bank.
Newspapers
and magazines are blandly reproducing official pronouncements and reports from the state-run news agency.
Many journalists spent time behind bars, and there was a price to be paid when the morning
newspapers
contained even accidental typos, such as occurred when a headline concerning a royal birthday read “suspicious” instead of “auspicious.”
Since January 2011, images of millions of women demonstrating alongside men have been beamed around the world by television journalists, posted on YouTube, and splashed on the front pages of
newspapers.
Sentiments that we take for granted in the opinion pages of
newspapers
rarely find their way into Bollywood blockbusters.
Berlin is not sleepy Bonn, and the world of the 24-news cycle is not the same as the clubby atmosphere of the old Federal Republic, where only the opinion of one or two
newspapers
mattered.
Recent allegations of phone hacking and illegal payments to police officers at some British
newspapers
published by News International, a subsidiary of News Corporation, are a clear reminder that journalists, like anyone, may be corrupted and manipulated to serve unscrupulous masters.
When, a little over a year ago, 42 elementary school children and teachers in impoverished Jiangxi (south central China) were killed in an explosion, China's domestic
newspapers
and internet sites reported the explosion as the result of an appalling child-labor scheme: nine-year-old children had been forced to install detonators in firecrackers so that teachers could sell fireworks to supplement their salaries.
As Jesse Reynolds of the Center for Genetics and Society writes, “Just as the traditional business model of
newspapers
is to get revenue not from readers but from advertisers, personal genomics companies see the potential profit not from the consumers themselves but from the compiled databases – likely in the form of selling access to them.”
Over the next few months,
newspapers
and television stations ran with the story as it snowballed into a national obsession.
Around the world,
newspapers
trumpet a "housing bubble" about to burst.
It will require less reliance on the traditional print media, just as the publics of the US and the world are relying less on
newspapers.
Ever since 2001, when France enacted a law requiring listed companies to reveal their executives’ pay packages,
newspapers
have had a field day denouncing greedy bosses.
The Brexit vote was driven by a distorted picture – eagerly painted by tabloid
newspapers
and populist politicians – of a country overflowing with migrants.
Nevertheless, my prediction gained bold front-page headlines in many major
newspapers
throughout the world.
As one of India’s leading daily newspapers, the Indian Express, spelled it out, lest anyone be confused, “a girlfriend is not a wife or spouse.”
They are being trained to use power in ways that their grandmothers could scarcely have imagined: publishing
newspapers
(as Sanaa el Seif did, in defiance of a government order to cease operating); campaigning for student leadership posts; fundraising for student organizations; and running meetings.
The Real Threats to the EULONDON – In the United Kingdom, Brexit looms large, with everyone from government ministers to tabloid
newspapers
frothing daily about the deal that will be struck with the European Union and the effects that it will have.
Parliamentarians were offended by press coverage of Queen Caroline’s divorce in 1820, and by newspapers’ mockery of King George IV.
The same system (recently put in place in Australia as well) has often been used by less democratically inclined governments to suppress independent, vigorous journalism; in Ecuador, for example,
newspapers
are regularly fined large sums for criticizing the government.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
About
Which
Television
Media
There
Government
People
World
Country
Magazines
Radio
Other
Would
Political
Pages
Local
Could
Years
Since