newscaster

[ UK /njˈuːzkɑːstɐ/ ]
[ US /ˈnuzˌkæstɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. someone who broadcasts the news
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How To Use newscaster In A Sentence

  • The 30-year-old, who is married to a Czech television newscaster, attributes his revival to concentrating on improving his short game.
  • News was consequential in the early days of ITN, and when they read it they meant it - newscasters made the news happen.
  • The 30-year-old, who is married to a Czech television newscaster, attributes his revival to concentrating on improving his short game.
  • Cut one over the other, so that each animal's arpeggio is mapped to appropriate newscasters and personalities (I want the duck's music mapped the Bush, I do!) and release it online. Boing Boing: December 15, 2002 - December 21, 2002 Archives
  • But Olbermann's priority and his mission as a newscaster is the solution for why the public mistrusts the media: TRUTH. Jamie Frevele: Lying Liars and How to Catch Them Rewriting History
  • Because the networks handle the exit polls in such a cloak-and-dagger fashion, not every newscaster who talks about them understands their limitations.
  • Anyway, it was a weird but fun day spent with congenial folks, and I did get to meet the newscaster, even if only as a disembodied voice in my ear.
  • The Newscaster, reporting on the scene, tries to distract his audience from the horrid nightmare by relating an Englishman's views on Steel Tariffs.
  • The snowstorm produced by the poor reception was particularly bad today, but the words of the newscaster came over loud and clear. WALL GAMES
  • Despite the newscaster's promise of sun, it was deathly cold in her room.
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