NOUN
  1. a person given to gossiping and divulging personal information about others
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How To Use newsmonger In A Sentence

  • `Now if it's work you're wanting of me, Miss Sophy, I think I can work some newsmongery for you that will pay your time. MAN'S LOVING FAMILY
  • `Now if it's work you're wanting of me, Miss Sophy, I think I can work some newsmongery for you that will pay your time. MAN'S LOVING FAMILY
  • “I knew he would show them to every newsmonger about the clubs,” said Phineas angrily. Phineas Redux
  • Several dainty missives and a lace handkerchief, with a monogram, invited the unscrupulous and prying glance of the inquisitive newsmonger. Under the Rose
  • Upon this, Annette would vehemently maintain that fed they were, and amply, as she had seen Elliott cut up their meat; whilst the friendly newsmonger would charitably hint, that her intended knew as well as most men how to turn an _honest_ penny, by cheating the dogs of their food, and selling it elsewhere. The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 20, No. 560, August 4, 1832
  • She was a mischievous newsmonger, and was keenly wondering what the effect of her words would be. Sister Carrie
  • And it was due in some measure to Oline that things had turned out no worse; so earnest was she in trying to secure a small remainder for herself that she dragged to light forgotten items that she, as gossip and newsmonger for years, remembered still, or matters outstanding which others would have passed over on purpose, to avoid causing unpleasantness to respectable fellow-citizens. The Growth of the Soil
  • No matter what the Voice of America says, we know it is a newsmonger, although it claims to be objective. CASTRO PRESS CONFERENCE AT DEBT MEETING
  • Accordingly, to add the strength of example to precept, Demetrius himself girt up his loins, and retreated with the most edifying speed to the opposite side of the ridge, accompanied by the greater part of the crowd, who had tarried there to witness the contest which the newsmonger promised, and were determined to take his word for their own safety. Count Robert of Paris
  • What news tell me? all hairs dresser are newsmonger. Boing Boing: September 4, 2005 - September 10, 2005 Archives
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