[
UK
/njˈuːzflæʃ/
]
[ US /ˈnusfɫæʃ/ ]
[ US /ˈnusfɫæʃ/ ]
NOUN
- a short news announcement concerning some on-going news story
How To Use newsflash In A Sentence
- Later, I was devastated when a newsflash announced the plane had crashed, killing all on board.
- Currently, I have a post-Christmas overdraft, but, as of five minutes ago, this BBC newsflash has put it in perspective.
- It is easy to judge something that you know little about, we all do it, you read a story in the paper or watch a newsflash and you find yourself forming an opinion based on the limited amount of information you are fed.
- But the extra price jump yesterday followed a newsflash that a Louisiana pipeline hub was in better shape than expected.
- And here's a newsflash most fathers probably don't want to hear (apologies to dads, and so close to Father's Day): In addition to reading Charlotte's Web and talking about horses, little girls like so-called trampy stuff. Kim Morgan: Now Be A Good Little Girl
- We interrupt this presidency to bring you a newsflash.
- Child Rescue Alert, which interrupts television and radio programmes with newsflashes that a child has been snatched and is at risk of serious harm, will go live early in the new year.
- Newsflash: the hundreds of billions of dollars in bailouts were passed last year under Bush Jr.! GOP unveils new health care ad campaign
- We interrupt this programme to bring you a newsflash.
- We hear the statistics or the newsflash of a shooting or a bombing, but we don't think about the people who are left behind, particularly the children.