Indeed, she had already perfected her own brand of "journalese" while writing for other magazines of the time.
From theCambridge English Corpus
Hindsight, emotion andjournalesehave skewed the facts.
From theCambridge English Corpus
Journalesewould seem an obvious separate category.
From theCambridge English Corpus
I turn for a good bit ofjournaleseto page 7.
From the
Hansard archive
Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under theOpen Parliament Licence v3.0
It isjournaleserather than legal drafting which we find when we read this subsection.
From the
Hansard archive
Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under theOpen Parliament Licence v3.0
I am all for shaking countries out of complacency, but that sort ofjournalesedoes not serve the interests of the world's poor and starving.
From the
Hansard archive
Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under theOpen Parliament Licence v3.0
That is not very prettyjournalese, but still it is forcible in effect.
From the
Hansard archive
Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under theOpen Parliament Licence v3.0
We suffer from "televisionese"and"journalese" and sometimes it is pathetic.
From the
Hansard archive
Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under theOpen Parliament Licence v3.0
I do not know whether that word isjournalese, or whether it is significant: but it could mean quite a lot.
From the
Hansard archive
Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under theOpen Parliament Licence v3.0
The article is the usualjournalese.
From the
Hansard archive
Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under theOpen Parliament Licence v3.0
Several similar concepts to officialese exist, including "genteelism", "commercialese", "academese" and "journalese".
From
Wikipedia
This example is from Wikipedia and may be reused under a CC BY-SA license.
Popular misunderstanding of the commonjournaleseexpression rioting and mayhem caused the common usual modern use of mayhem to mean havoc and disorder, often with humorous overtones: see wiktionary:mayhem.
From
Wikipedia
This example is from Wikipedia and may be reused under a CC BY-SA license.
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.