释义 |
correspondentnoun[C](REPORTER)apersonemployedby anewspaper, atelevisionstation, etc. toreporton aparticularsubjectorsendreportsfrom aforeigncountry: 通讯员,记者awarcorrespondent战地记者 theeducationcorrespondent for the Guardian《卫报》的教育通讯员 - In herlatestdispatch, Clare Duggan,ourwarcorrespondent,reportedanincreaseinfighting.
- Shespokeemotionallyabout herexperiencesas awarcorrespondent.
- Ourforeigncorrespondentfiledthisreportearliertoday.
- Perhaps her mostproductiveperiodwas her five-yearstintas aforeigncorrespondent in New York.
- Ourracingcorrespondent has thefollowingtipsfor the 3.15 and the 3.45 at Newmarket .
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrasesBroadcasting: radio & television presenters - anchor
- anchorman
- anchorwoman
- announcer
- broadcaster
- co-host
- compere
- desk
- disc jockey
- disk jockey
- DJ
- emcee
- frontman
- host
- presenter
- shock jock
- sportscaster
- talking head
- televangelist
- weather forecaster
See more results » You can also find related words, phrases, and synonyms in the topics: News reporting & the press correspondentnoun[C](LETTER WRITER)formalsomeone who writesletters: 通信者,写信人 I'm aterriblecorrespondent - I neverseemto get thetimeto write.我很少写信——我好像从来就没空写信。 SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrasesPeople who write for work or pleasure - autobiographer
- blogger
- Braillist
- chronicler
- co-author
- columnist
- dramatist
- humorist
- poet
- satirist
- scribe
- scriptwriter
- Shakespeare
- songwriter
- speechwriter
- stenographer
- stylist
- tweep
- tweeter
- twitterati
See more results » (Definition ofcorrespondentfrom theCambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary & Thesaurus© Cambridge University Press)correspondent| American Dictionarycorrespondentnoun[C](REPORTER)apersonemployedby anewspaper,magazine,televisionstation, etc., toreportnewson aparticularsubjector from aplacethat isfaraway: Heworksas a correspondent in Moscow. correspondentnoun[C](LETTER WRITER)apersonwho writeslettersto anotherperson: Willa was not a good correspondent, and often didn’t write formonths. (Definition ofcorrespondentfrom theCambridge Academic Content Dictionary© Cambridge University Press)correspondent| Business EnglishCOMMUNICATIONSapersonwho writes aletteroremail: apersonwhoworksfor anewspaper,televisionstation, etc. and whosejobis toreporton aparticularsubjector from anothercountry: business/labour/legal, etc. correspondentOurguestisfinancialcorrespondent at the New York Times. BANKINGacorrespondent bank (Definition ofcorrespondentfrom theCambridge Business English Dictionary© Cambridge University Press)Examplesofcorrespondentcorrespondent As many correspondents know, he has worked very enthusiastically over the past eighteen months on behalf of the journal.From theCambridge English Corpus There are no professional foreign correspondents already in place.From theCambridge English Corpus A more locally informed and regionally focused information order emerged using local idiom, correspondents, events and news.From theCambridge English Corpus Television and radio stations sent their correspondents, as did all the major weeklies and daily newspapers.From theCambridge English Corpus Another major aspect, touched on only peripherally by your correspondents, is how to get reviewers to actually get down to doing reviews.From theCambridge English Corpus The correspondents commented that we did not reference their 1999 account of the outbreak [2].From theCambridge English Corpus In addition to domestic and personal communications, penfriends look for correspondents with whom to exchange cards of mutual interest.From theCambridge English Corpus Working in groups of three, the students present their correspondents' letters (in which they describe their families) and show the accompanying photographs.From theCambridge English Corpus However, other correspondents were only rescued from oblivion when some expedition members credited their local contribution to the process of knowledge acquisition.From theCambridge English Corpus Among 46 correspondents, only one man did not reveal his chronological age and only one woman expressed concerns about identifying with the number.From theCambridge English Corpus Here she is at her best, reading letters with perception about the expectations of correspondents.From theCambridge English Corpus By now, the story was still running on the news pages, but increasingly bylines were being shared between science and foreign correspondents.From theCambridge English Corpus Printed works mirrored the efforts of casuists in resolving the scruples of their correspondents by adopting the language and methods of case divinity.From theCambridge English Corpus A single letter writer could form the hub of an enormous network of correspondents.From theCambridge English Corpus The only factor selected as significant is the degree of literacy, with more literate correspondents favoring -s.From theCambridge English Corpus 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. #https://dictionary.cambridge.org//dictionary/english/correspondent## |