columnist

[ US /ˈkɑɫəmnəst/ ]
[ UK /kˈɒləmnˌɪst/ ]
NOUN
  1. a journalist who writes editorials
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How To Use columnist In A Sentence

  • The Seattle Times says a business columnist and associate editor has resigned after admitting he plagiarized the work of other journalists.
  • Simon Jenkins, a columnist with the UK's Guardian recently called Zuma a rapist and a racketeer in perhaps one of the most acerbic pieces yet the Guardian has published on Zuma.
  • Sitting in the chairs for a shapeup this week are freelance writer Jimi Izrael, syndicated columnist Ruben Navarrette, civil rights attorney and editor Arsalan Iftikhar, and NPR's political editor Ken Rudin. 'Shop Talk': The Political Witchunt For Christine O'Donnell
  • He cannot afford to draw the unwanted attention of gossip columnists unless he has some ulterior motive for doing so. Behind Closed Doors - advice for families with violence in the home
  • The gossip columnist was paid to chronicle the latest escapades of the socially prominent celebrities.
  • So intriguing; I feel like a failed gossip columnist. Times, Sunday Times
  • Perhaps all columnists have to persuade themselves that they count, that they matter, that they are agents of history, whispering words of wisdom into the ear of the history makers.
  • Ah, but voters are fickle and rarely take into consideration the desires of distant princelings (or columnists, for that matter).
  • He takes systematic aim at the architects of millennial economic opinion: journalists and columnists, cultural studies academics, ad-men, and the shills of the new management literature.
  • The station now features a news program hosted by a local columnist, who has brought several newsmakers to the show.
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