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Fleet Street

NOUN
  1. a street in central London where newspaper offices are situated
  2. British journalism

How To Use Fleet Street In A Sentence

  • In an effort to boost flagging confidence, Nimslo loaned cameras to the Fleet street city press.
  • There are also diaries graced with pseudonymous titles which do nothing to conceal their authors' identities, at least from the rest of Fleet Street's cognoscenti.
  • Freshfields's new marbled offices off Fleet Street would pique the ego of the grandest City banker.
  • He was, however, a hack, a dyed-in-the-wool Fleet Street man.
  • Although he detested journalism his Johnsonian manner and compelling character established him as one of Fleet Street's most charismatic figures.
  • But Iain McGregor, Bible teacher, ex-Fleet Street journalist and source of the theory, seemed unshaken by the small turn-out and its seeming dismissal of his idea.
  • Your establishment is in Fleet Street, you say?
  • It remains in dispute whether the Daily Mail first christened them All Blacks through their original all-black uniform or because of their novel "all-court" style of 15-man running play and the term "all backs" was transposed to "blacks" by a Fleet Street telephonist. How the original All Blacks went down in the annals of history
  • He may not be overjoyed to hear that the inquiry has been moved to an office in Fleet Street. Times, Sunday Times
  • At the game of auctions, docks, shy wine-merchants, depend on it there is no winning; and I would as soon think of buying jewellery at an auction in Fleet Street as of purchasing wine from one of your dreadful needy wine-agents such as infest every man's door. Roundabout Papers
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