[
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
- 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.
- A reporter was dispatched to Naples to cover the riot.
- Mr. SOARIES: Robert Tilton, Robert Tilton is a so-called televangelist who was discovered to have gotten prayer requests accompanied by money and then when an investigative reporter went behind his church he found all of those prayer requests dumped unopened. NPR Topics: News