[
US
/ˈdʒɝnəɫ/
]
[ UK /dʒˈɜːnəl/ ]
[ UK /dʒˈɜːnəl/ ]
NOUN
- a daily written record of (usually personal) experiences and observations
- a record book as a physical object
- the part of the axle contained by a bearing
- a ledger in which transactions have been recorded as they occurred
-
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?
- But there is bad news for dorks like me and, I suspect, quite a few people in this room: journalism has changed forever.
- 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
- Jealous Liberal Journalists Attack Keith Olbermann yahooBuzzArticleHeadline = 'Jealous Liberal Journalists Attack Keith Olbermann'; yahooBuzzArticleSummary = 'Article: Lookout Keith Olbermann: now that you are more popular than Bill O\'Reilly in the cable news Neilson ratings, you must confront an even bigger monster, an even more tenacious adversary, an egomaniacally superior life-species: establishment liberal journalists.' Jealous Liberal Journalists Attack Keith Olbermann
- I NOTICE that apart from the widespread complaint that the German pilotless planes seem so unnatural (a bomb dropped by a live airman is quite natural, apparently), some journalists are denouncing them as barbarous, inhumane, and an indiscriminate attack on civilians. As I Please
- He is the author of well over 100 research publications including journal articles, book chapters, and six books on desert grassland, the cacti of Sonora, the Sonoran desert tortoise, and packrat middens and the paleoecology of the southwestern deserts. Contributor: Tom Van Devender
- I met Len Sellers in the mid-1990s, when he was still a journalism professor at San Francisco State University, where, among other things, he taught a newswriting course that was generally considered make-or-break for aspiring journalists, a hard-core exercise in using public documents and other reliable information sources to write solid news reports. ... he was an early believer in the possibilities of online journalism. OpEdNews - Quicklink: Nonprofit-Funded, University-Based News
- Remember, he is more accustomed to interviews with fawning, gushy, fans, rather than with more hard-nosed journalists.