1A publication produced by a particular firm, institution, or society and dealing mainly with its own activities.
he was also responsible for founding and editing the institute's house journal
Example sentencesExamples
He contributed suitably modernist articles to house journals.
She was one of the National Vigilance Association's earliest supporters, editing its house journal, the Vigilance Record.
He was intent on attacking the British Film Institute and its house journal, Sight and Sound.
In the house journal of the Royal Society of Chemistry, a researcher reported that an accident had occurred in which the lid of a steel drum, used for disposal of laboratory solvents, had been blown off, apparently due to an increase in internal pressure.
He joined J. Sainsbury & Co. to edit their house journal.
Fans the magazine Parking News, house journal of the British Parking Association, will be thrilled to learn the March issue is out.
Their latest paper is published in the house journal of the Miami Children's Hospital.
The club produces a house journal and now has a web presence.
An initial project by tax officers in Norfolk found widespread evasion, with an average tax take of £19,000 per visit, according to an article in the HMRC's house journal.
By the early 1930s, it performed the role of an innocuous house journal reporting wage movements, social activities, obituaries, and precious little else.
1.1A publication preferred by a particular group of people.
the house journal for Middle England
Example sentencesExamples
They normally treat The Guardian as their house journal and guiding star.
The house journal of techies turns its attention to the latest hype.
He was spitting vitriol in house journal of the doolally.
He plans to write to the news broadcaster, slamming it for "becoming the house journal for the BNP".
The other day, in the house journal of the British left, he wrote: "The war was a reckless, provocative, dangerous, lawless piece of unilateral arrogance."
More than just a magazine, The Face became the house journal for the post-punk generation.
Their views boom out of the current issue of the house journal of the radical bourgeoisie.
The editor of Labour's traditional house journal is keen to offer some advice.
It used to be a Blairite house journal but is now more leftish than he is.
In an interview with Good Housekeeping, the house journal of the suburban middle classes, he claimed that young workers today needed to be able to "knock out seven 18-hour days in a row".