A periodical published by a company to be read by its employees and other interested parties and dealing mainly with its own activities.
Example sentencesExamples
Those thoughts, among many others, have been published in the company's corporate newsletter, a cry-for-help house organ that's E-mailed to a select group on a sporadic basis.
But not a word of Castro's speech was quoted, in a newspaper which serves as a virtual house organ for the Cuban president.
But reporters like Milbank remind us of the Post's history as a particular party's house organ.
And, as the house organ for America's political class, the paper has helped push the debate in the Administration's favor.
So it's really important that the magazine not be allowed to become merely ‘a house organ.’
Now, if the airline can only match their house organ.
They are asking an awful lot of the media, which hasn't fully completed its Orwellian transformation into an official house organ of the corporate state.
But this is first and foremost a magazine, not a house organ for designers.
Definition of house organ in US English:
house organ
nounˈhous ˌôrɡən
A periodical published by a company to be read by its employees and other interested parties and dealing mainly with its own activities.
Example sentencesExamples
And, as the house organ for America's political class, the paper has helped push the debate in the Administration's favor.
So it's really important that the magazine not be allowed to become merely ‘a house organ.’
But this is first and foremost a magazine, not a house organ for designers.
But reporters like Milbank remind us of the Post's history as a particular party's house organ.
Now, if the airline can only match their house organ.
But not a word of Castro's speech was quoted, in a newspaper which serves as a virtual house organ for the Cuban president.
Those thoughts, among many others, have been published in the company's corporate newsletter, a cry-for-help house organ that's E-mailed to a select group on a sporadic basis.
They are asking an awful lot of the media, which hasn't fully completed its Orwellian transformation into an official house organ of the corporate state.