[
UK
/njˈuːzwɜːði/
]
[ US /ˈnuzˌwɝði/ ]
[ US /ˈnuzˌwɝði/ ]
ADJECTIVE
- sufficiently interesting to be reported in a newspaper
How To Use newsworthy In A Sentence
- Consulting those documents, typed on old Royals and Underwoods, sometimes existing only as "carbons," feels like traveling back to the age of three-martini lunches.) What made this newsworthy was that Wylie and Amazon. com had annouced with much fanfare that the agent was starting his own publishing house that would partner exclusively with Amazon to sell the work of some 20 authors. Peter Ginna: Andrew Wylie vs Random House: The Thrilla in Manila (Folders)
- But these non-newsworthy-factoids have spawned appallingly simple-minded reflections.
- On the surface it promotes the idea that the New York Times will cover all newsworthy events.
- The more successful the projection of the desired version has been, the more newsworthy is the picture of a tear-stained cheek, tonsil-revealing laugh, a few new jowls, or just a glum glance.
- A murder taking place or a murder being stopped in progress is newsworthy. The answer to why the Economy Isn’t Happening | Johnny B. Truant
- Infinitely less important and less newsworthy stories were run instead.
- However, in terms of the quality of speech, what counts as newsworthy is an important discussion.
- Is this how we are going to determine employment prospects for all released criminals, or only for those considered newsworthy by the media? Times, Sunday Times
- Observers noted that what made the event newsworthy was not that the Fed made an error.
- Simmons-Harris, was of course the most newsworthy aspect of the decision, but the dissents were no less revealing.