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newsroom

or news room

[ nooz-room, -room, nyooz- ]

noun

  1. a room in the offices of a newspaper, news service, or broadcasting organization in which the news is processed.


newsroom

/ -ˌrʊm; ˈnjuːzˌruːm /

noun

  1. a room in a newspaper office or television or radio station, where news is received and prepared for publication or broadcasting


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Word History and Origins

Origin of newsroom1

First recorded in 1810–20

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Example Sentences

The Newsroom aired its final episode on Sunday, already an eternity ago in news-cycle terms.

The Newsroom is over, newsrooms as we traditionally understand them are rapidly declining, and New Media is here to stay.

That this kind of episode was The Newsroom finale was…confusing.

That fight, and The Newsroom, then, must have been worth it.

Such has been the much talked about run of The Newsroom, which ended Sunday night after three seasons.

As she closed the door behind her, she realized that nearly every eye in the apparently-busy newsroom, had focused upon her.

As she paused just beyond the closed door, every eye in the newsroom focused upon her.

A sleepy-eyed desk man greeted Penny as she entered the deserted newsroom.

The modern club is a tavern and newsroom, where the members are both guests and landlord.

Even as a youngster in pigtails, she had haunted the big noisy newsroom, pecking at the typewriters and making a pest of herself.

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