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televise

[ US /ˈtɛɫəˌvaɪz/ ]
[ UK /tˈɛlɪvˌa‍ɪz/ ]
VERB
  1. broadcast via television
    The Royal wedding was televised

How To Use televise In A Sentence

  • The two-hour show was televised on the national network so the whole country could watch.
  • Party conferences, like American party conventions, have increasingly become stage-managed for the televised projection of the positive party image and strong leadership.
  • Doherty took a 6-2 lead last night, compiling a 107 break in the second frame but Dale hit the highest break of the televised stages with a 140 in the seventh frame.
  • And when it comes to yearly televised fluff (that is, if we have to choose one), there are Oscar people and there are Super Bowl people.
  • Is a party more aggrieved by the fact that their grief, loss and suffering is televised around the world?
  • Any chance at all that you'll get around to reporting that Obama will televise directly into the classrooms next Tuesday and that the government is suggesting that teachers work with students to write out how they can "help the President". Obama to address joint session of Congress next week
  • The only genuine parts of the whole televised event were the blast-off and splashdown.
  • Instead, his deputy read out a televised statement in which he avoided the word "resignation" and said Mubarak was "handing power" to the Supreme Military Council, a group of army generals who have ruled Egypt since February 11. Reuters: Press Release
  • The time difference was punishing; games televised at 2.30 am, 5.30 am and 7.30 am.
  • Has not the poetic legacy of the avant-garde already begun to resemble a blasted library, bestrewn with the unburied cadavers of lunatics and suicides — all the beautiful, but misguided, losers who have martyred themselves to untelevised revolutions? Writing and Failure (Part 1) : Christian Bök : Harriet the Blog : The Poetry Foundation
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