journalistic

adj
/ˌd͡ʒɜː(ɹ)nəˈlɪstɪk/

Etymology

From journal + -istic (“adjective”). Also parsed directly as journalist + -ic (“adjective”), also used in sense of related journalism (having to do with journalism).

  1. derived from diurnālis
  2. derived from jornel — “day
  3. derived from jurnal — “daily
  4. inherited from journal
  5. suffixed as journalistic — “journal + istic

Definitions

  1. Related to journalism or journalists.

    • Substituting "[expletive]" for swear words in an article's text is a journalistic practice of sensibility.
    • This gang-bang speaks more to journalistic groupthink than to any real moral or legal reasoning.
    • In September 1981, I was appointed Assistant Editor of Steam World (edited by David Wilcock), so was lucky to be trained in the same journalistic approach which both David and Peter had already deployed in transforming the sector.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for journalistic. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA