[
US
/ˈbɹɔdˌkæst/
]
[ UK /bɹˈɔːdkɑːst/ ]
[ UK /bɹˈɔːdkɑːst/ ]
NOUN
- message that is transmitted by radio or television
-
a radio or television show
did you see his program last night?
VERB
-
sow over a wide area, especially by hand
broadcast seeds -
cause to become widely known
spread information
circulate a rumor
broadcast the news -
broadcast over the airwaves, as in radio or television
We cannot air this X-rated song
How To Use broadcast In A Sentence
- Immersed in her ample lap, her adoring voice broadcasting stereophonically through her bosoms, I absorbed the sensationalistic stories and lush illustrations of baby Moses in his basket, later parting the very Red Sea. The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com
- Its hard drive can store 100 movies, and an antenna receives new films via broadcast airwaves.
- Tomorrow, if I were lusting for cash and recognition and all the things people get into broadcasting for, I might decide talk radio was my easiest point of access.
- Still less can they accept impartial public broadcasting combined with a biased press and biased satellite television.
- The broadcaster attacked customs officials and police who seemingly stood on the quayside watching without intervening to help. Times, Sunday Times
- Broadcast also report that the entire second series of Got to Dance will be in stereovision too. /Film UK - A Special Screening of Moon, An Alice in Wonderland Controversy Exclusive, and Much, Much More | /Film
- Redford said his longtime friendship with network anchor Tom Brokaw helped him understand the broadcast news environment.
- High-frequency waves broadcast by the radar bounce off a person, scanning the in-and-out movement of the chest and more subtle, but also detectable, motion of the heartbeat against the chest wall.
- Lead commentators, Don Cherry and Ron MacLean broadcast from a remote area. Mike Plume: “8:30 Newfoundland” « Mudpuddle
- The state broadcaster has been transmitting the Angelus on television for 40 years and longer on radio.