[
US
/ɹɪˈpɔɹtɝ/
]
[ UK /ɹɪpˈɔːtɐ/ ]
[ UK /ɹɪpˈɔːtɐ/ ]
NOUN
- a person who investigates and reports or edits news stories
How To Use reporter In A Sentence
- 8. The reporters all want Obama to make the sort of inaccurate, snide, snipy comments that the Clintons are now firing off daily. Archive 2008-03-01
- The consultant then carefully observes the anchors and reporters to determine if they fit the viewer profile.
- Dowsett is a television news reporter / anchor for KTVL, the CBS station in Medford, Oregon.
- But here's the caveat: Not all books written by newspaper reporters should be reviewed.
- Christie was involved in an angry bust-up with reporters and photographers outside the courtroom.
- The overall seaminess of that enterprise is so underreported that just last week, one of the Post's own reporters felt like they had to obtain a quote in order to get the dictionary definition of "lobbyist" into their story. Peter Orszag's Move From The White House To Citigroup Should Definitely Trouble You
- He made the declarations while responding to reporters' questions on the bilateral debt forgiveness agreement during yesterday's post-Cabinet news conference at Whitehall.
- I think it's a dangerous thing to have that schmoozy Washington relationship between reporters and principals, because that's when news doesn't get reported.
- As a reporter he gets to rub shoulders with all the big names in politics.
- Reporters asked him to clarify his position on welfare reform.