[
US
/ˌɛdəˈtɔɹiəɫ/
]
[ UK /ˌɛdɪtˈɔːɹɪəl/ ]
[ UK /ˌɛdɪtˈɔːɹɪəl/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
relating to or characteristic of an editor
editorial duties -
of or relating to an article stating opinions or giving perspectives
editorial column
NOUN
- an article giving opinions or perspectives
How To Use editorial In A Sentence
- She was previously editorial and production assistant at Product Communication, in London.
- Three of the four panelists are current or former editorial page editors.
- Complain about their bad grammar or poor choice of headlines or biased editorials.
- The editorial begins with a recapitulation of the basic argument marshaled by the Bush administration regarding his past actions while on the board of directors of Harken Energy.
- So over the next year, she pored over magazines, drafted an editorial plan and put together a dummy issue from published magazine pages and pictures that she liked.
- The Peoples Liberation Army Daily editorialised in early July that Jiang was the ‘core’ of the government.
- After that, the stories came out in a rush, many of them editorials by journalists congratulating themselves for not running the story in the first place.
- The family struggled to agree a formula under which a panel would be established to safeguard editorial independence. Times, Sunday Times
- The editorials and breast-beating must look quaint and mystifying at the very least.
- Recently both the Times and the New York Daily News have editorialized in favor of reopening the Fresh Kills landfill.