[
US
/ˈnuzˌɹum/
]
[ UK /njˈuːzɹuːm/ ]
[ UK /njˈuːzɹuːm/ ]
NOUN
- a reading room (in a library or club) where newspapers and other periodicals can be read
- an office in which news is processed by a newspaper or news agency or television or radio station
-
the staff of a newspaper or the news department of a periodical
every newspaper editor is criticized by the newsroom
How To Use newsroom In A Sentence
- The looseness of the journalistic life, the seeming laxity of the newsroom, is an illusion.
- A pressman from the paper noticed it and called the newsroom, but it was too late to pull the illustration.
- The only fun she had that day was running through the newsroom, startling my colleagues with her sudden appearance at their desks.
- I'd miss the noise and chatter of the newsroom, and even the daily argy-bargy with the subs. RESCUING ROSE
- When news of the gruesome homicide began to trickle out, the Washington Post newsroom was astir.
- About 6 months ago they did a story on the introduction of a whizzo piece of software being rolled out across all ABC metro newsrooms. Cheeseburger Gothic » MacSpeech Dictate, a potted review.
- And there's always a lot of sniping and carping in the newsroom and by the water cooler.
- For instance, we have computer games in our interactive newsroom that let people kind of simulate the process of reporting a story or going out to get a dramatic river rescue photograph or you can even do something like we're doing right here. CNN Transcript Apr 10, 2008
- The great divide between the word people and the visual people is nothing new in newspaper newsrooms.
- The populist side of me is very much about my identification with the culture of a newsroom.