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Example sentences for "journalism"

Lexicographically close words:
jounce; jounced; jouncing; jour; journal; journalist; journalistic; journalists; journalizing; journals
  1. His fondness for journalism led him to resume the editorial pen just after the close of the war, when he published at Camden, Alabama, the Wilcox Times.

  2. He returned to Mobile in 1853, entered the lumber business, was burnt out, and entered again the field of journalism by purchasing the Mobile Register.

  3. The journalism of to-day is a very different thing to that of the past.

  4. That the liberty accorded to it is still abused by journals on a par with the lowest type of journalism in Europe is to be regretted.

  5. Granice had known Robert Denver for fifteen years--watched his rise through all the stages of journalism to the Olympian pinnacle of the Investigator's editorial office.

  6. After all, journalism gave a deeper insight than the law into the fantastic possibilities of life, prepared one better to allow for the incalculableness of human impulses.

  7. I think I may say I've got my bearings in the Five Towns, after over a year's journalism in it, and it appeared to me that you were the best man I could approach.

  8. He had had too disconcerting a glimpse of the rigours and perils of journalism to wish to continue it.

  9. He knew that in his talent (his mere journalistic talent) there was a genius that no amount of journalism had as yet subdued.

  10. Of all that brilliant band of young men lured by journalism to ruin they looked on their Rickman as the most splendid, the most tragic.

  11. He had looked to journalism for the means to support a wife, and journalism alone could maintain him in his struggle with Pilkington.

  12. But the root of the difference is that in journalism the reader finds what he is looking for, whereas in literature he must find at least a part of what the author intended.

  13. In journalism or the "bad art," there is no such strain on the public.

  14. But this engrained fecundity and facundity of hers inevitably make her work novel-journalism rather than novel-literature in all points but in that of style, which has been discussed already.

  15. As a progressive journalist, and one who must recognize the philanthropic activity of the women of the Northwest, has it ever occurred to you that there is nowhere in journalism a special recognition of their interests?

  16. Literature and journalism will cease to be a means of money-making and living at the cost of others.

  17. He had a natural talent for journalism and the stage, and, at twenty-six, retired from less congenial business to devote himself to the writing of plays.

  18. Founder of Modern Journalism Was Called Everything That Had an Unpleasant Name, but He Prospered.

  19. At twenty-five he found himself editor and proprietor of a country weekly in Kansas; and the step from journalism to politics proved an easy one.

  20. But, Mac, you've been hammering at me about the crookedness of journalism in Worthington from the first.

  21. Who are you," continued the journalist, "to talk standards of honesty in journalism to those boys?

  22. Journalism seems to have got into your blood.

  23. Why, it's your kind that's made journalism the sewer of the professions, full of the scum and drainings of every other trade's failures.

  24. Anybody who works on a different principle, I don't care whether it's in politics or journalism or the pulpit, is going to get hurt.

  25. What do you think you're hiring, a Professor of Journalism in the infant class?

  26. He responded no more willingly to leads on journalism than to encomiums of Certina.

  27. Journalism is no different from any other business, Boy-ee.

  28. Journalism Written today, and read today, And stale the news tomorrow!

  29. He had dabbled in journalism and talked with literary fellows like myself.

  30. Is journalism with you a life-work or merely a means to a higher literary end?

  31. But there can be no doubt as to the influence of the new journalism on sport and pastime.

  32. My last shorthand lesson was taken in 1885, long after I had ceased to think of journalism as a profession.

  33. My relations decided, after reading it, that journalism was the career for me; a decision that then seemed to me both reasonable and pleasant, which now strikes me with amazement, nay with stupefaction.

  34. But one of my first "assignments" in journalism was to describe a Giant Apple.

  35. Journalism cannot be now what it was when papers were read by people of culture.

  36. As democracy makes progress in England, journalism will become more and more American, although the English reporter will have some trouble in succeeding to compete with his American confrere in humor and liveliness.

  37. I do not think that American journalism needs an apology.

  38. Formerly daily journalism was a branch of literature; now it is a news store, and is so not only in America.

  39. If the colonel is of opinion that journalism is a trade, and the journalist a mere tradesman, I agree with him.

  40. If journalism is not to rank among the highest and noblest of professions, and is to be nothing more than a commercial enterprise, I agree with him.

  41. In a democracy, the stage and journalism have to please the masses of the people.

  42. Taylor, editor of the Boston Globe, give an interesting summary of an address on journalism which he is to deliver next Saturday before the members of the New England Club of Boston.

  43. A people active and busy as the Americans are, want a journalism that will keep their interest awake and amuse them; and they naturally get it.

  44. A free country possesses the government it deserves, and the journalism it wants.

  45. As the people become better and better educated, the stage and journalism will rise with them.

  46. An instructive parallel in literary journalism occurs to me.

  47. Every now and then we hear eloquent appeals to the appropriate authorities, praying them to add to their school of journalism a department of art criticism.

  48. Reporters' "copy" telling in graphic style of the Balkan War poured into the "city room" of the newspaper plant at the Columbia University School of Journalism yesterday.

  49. It was not till after the beginning of the Revolution that journalism proper spread and multiplied, and that journalists became a power.

  50. Indeed it would hardly be an exaggeration to describe Gringore's work as the result of a kind of groping after journalism condemned by the circumstances of the time to the most awkward and inappropriate form.

  51. This sudden uprise of journalism produced a remarkable change in the conditions of literary work, and offered chances to many who would previously have been dependent on individual patronage.

  52. The leading article or unsigned political and miscellaneous essay has never been so strong a feature of French journalism as it has been of English.

  53. After the Revolution the fortune of journalism was assured, and though under the subsequent forms of government it was subjected to a rigid censorship, it was too firmly established to be overthrown.

  54. From the crowd of clever writers whom this outburst of journalism found ready to draw their pens in one service or the other, two names emerge as pre-eminently remarkable.

  55. A short notice of the chief of these will be found lower down in this chapter, but a full history of French journalism is impossible here.

  56. Or has he further prostituted journalism by this ignorant act?

  57. But whiskey, drugs, and yellow journalism do.

  58. In America the President reigns for four years, and Journalism governs for ever and ever.

  59. Fortunately in America Journalism has carried its authority to the grossest and most brutal extreme.

  60. Carlow folk held up their heads when journalism was mentioned.


  61. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "journalism" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    advice; artistry; authorship; communications; composition; information; intelligence; journalism; newsletter; newspaper; pen; press; publishing; radio; television; tidings; word; writing