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[ US /ˈdʒɝnəɫ/ ]
[ UK /d‍ʒˈɜːnə‍l/ ]
NOUN
  1. a daily written record of (usually personal) experiences and observations
  2. a record book as a physical object
  3. the part of the axle contained by a bearing
  4. a ledger in which transactions have been recorded as they occurred
  5. a periodical dedicated to a particular subject
    he reads the medical journals

How To Use journal In A Sentence

  • Leaked Reports Detail Iran's Aid for Iraqi Militias," blared the headline on afront page story inThe New York Times, which went on to report on several incidents recounted in WikiLeaks documents that journalist Michael Gordon called "the shadow war between the United States and Iraqi militias backed by Iran's Revolutionary Guards. Ali Gharib: What Did WikiLeaks Really Tell Us About Iran?
  • So, did it take a row over a ban on journalists to enable him to penetrate the secret that the regime is not a model of benignity?
  • Even while he was missing, those uncertain hours of anxious speculation and dismal journalism, she had assumed Maxwell would be found boomingly alive, having spent the whole time enjoying the amorous advances of a short-sighted minke whale. Country of the Blind
  • Worldcon thingo with David Brin and Teddy Harvia tags kanye west meme livejournal via ljapp Worldcon thingo with David Brin and Teddy Harvia
  • But there is bad news for dorks like me and, I suspect, quite a few people in this room: journalism has changed forever.
  • Much investigative journalism involves some form of subterfuge. Times, Sunday Times
  • And as journalists and commentators have often said, the French elected a man and not a couple. Times, Sunday Times
  • Different methods are a better fit for different people," Lyubomirsky explains."Keeping a daily gratitude journal seems hokey to some people, but writing a letter of gratitude may be very meaningful.
  • The exigencies of journalism demand instant appraisals and on-the-spot verdicts.
  • He might have caused a storm in a teacup in the corridors of the Westminster press lobby as journalists squabbled over who had the story, whether it was attributable and who had told The Sun anyway.
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