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单词 reportage
释义

Definition of reportage in English:

reportage

noun rɪˈpɔːtɪdʒˌrɛpɔːˈtɑːʒ
mass noun
  • 1The reporting of news by the press and the broadcasting media.

    新闻报道

    extensive reportage of elections

    对选举的大量报道。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It is impossible not to be reminded of the frenzied media reportage that has become the mainstay of American television news coverage.
    • It was a short step from such mainstream reportage to the reports of the FBI files, in which, as shown below, the FBI branded Baker as a serious threat and thoroughly racialized and politicized her.
    • News is delivered not so much as reportage as an opinion piece.
    • But, this is the story, once again, about how a perception gets started in the media thanks to shoddy reportage.
    • Still, the hysteria reportage of the New York Times continues.
    • As a successful journalist Mike is skilled in news reportage and knows the impact of the written word.
    • The FBI, relying heavily on hearsay and reportage from the American press and even international presses, provided an extensive profile of Baker as a political threat.
    • Despite the artist's efforts to reveal the artifice of traditional media reportage, he employs analogous documentary and camera techniques that similarly objectify them without ever rising to the level of critique.
    • It was a fascinating piece of reportage about an area of music that many people are unaware exists.
    • Design writing includes journalism, commentary, criticism, both popular and academic - it is practiced as essay, reportage, commentary, blurb, and now blog post.
    • Reality is no longer the trusted referent of ‘news’ programs, as visual re-creation and graphic manipulation join analysis and conjecture in supplanting documentation and reportage.
    • His response was to create - in the Irish Times - the most significant Irish newspaper of the 20th century, with its reportage, critique and record.
    • Either a journalist withers on the vine when they take a job like this or they become a corporate PR person following their bland, risk-averse PR orders i.e. a million miles away from the freedom of news desk reportage.
    • It's interesting, I can see a distinction between how a curator like John Szarkowski might draw on news reportage and introduce his own juxtapositions of imagery.
    • In these terms, journalism is even compared to the scientific method, intimately connected with accumulation of facts and analysis, and reportage of evidence.
    • Talk, in the form of reportage of ‘breaking news,’ including eyewitness reports and rumors, is the frontline mediator of the event itself.
    • A less in-your-face approach and more informative style, with third person commentary, would have complemented the strengths of this fly-on-the-wall reportage.
    • In May this year, we covered the burgeoning ‘grime’ scene with a brilliant piece of reportage that followed its rising stars through clubland and back to their tower block roots.
    • Her account of the siege, a condemnation of Luftwaffe bombing in Spain, is still a brilliant piece of reportage.
    • My point is, it's a fake stat, which is greatly subject to things like genre, the size of the Friday draw and even some slightly bent reportage.
    Synonyms
    reporting, description, treatment, handling, presentation
    1. 1.1 The factual, journalistic presentation of an account in a book or other text.
      the area where fiction borders with reportage
      Example sentencesExamples
      • John Hodgkiss edited the diverse selection of reportage and portrait photographs illustrating the book.
      • A self-taught artist, Ferdinand achieves an appealing bluntness, with the detail and graphic quality of reportage, using watercolor, colored pencil and ballpoint pen.
      • Ataman uses film to explore the notion of true confessions and reportage.
      • Throughout the album, Dead Prez move from bitter reportage, recounting tales of poverty and desperation, to impassioned calls to action.
      • Though reportage, Hamlet's words are hard upon the action's heels.
      • Can images arising from a self apparently at ease internally and at peace with its environs ever produce images that surpass mere visual reportage?
      • Tillim is best known for his black-and-white reportage but he introduced colour at his 2003 exhibition at the same venue.
      • Written by a senior officer who was there at the time, it's a combination of personal recollection and reportage.
      • Forget the unwieldy title and worthy subject matter, this is a breathless piece of reportage, like a vintage New Yorker feature put to film: expansive, comic, digressive and ever so slightly demented.
      • Sometimes more reportage than art exhibition, the show failed to provide a rigorous historical analysis.
      • She published two volumes of reportage, Vietnam and Hanoi, protesting against American involvement in Vietnam.
      • Both films function as sharp reportage as well as stories of political threat and intrigue, and their tone's ultimately accusatory: there's a problem, and it's being ignored right now.
      • Their sense of play and reliance on narrative and metaphor made them vehicles for more than simple reportage and documentation.
      • Although enthusiastically received by its sold-out audience - a good portion of whom were clearly Burning Man alumni - it fails at the most basic level of documentary reportage.
      • Anecdote dominates many chapters, with unreflective reportage frequently doing duty for examination.
      • Now as in the past, the claim of reportage has always stood as a disavowal of responsibility for the pictures' contents.
      • What only the war correspondents present at the time knew, he said, was that Scoop was actually a piece of straight reportage, thinly disguised as a novel.
      • I felt that at some point in this career as a reporter, a reporter ought to have written a book of reportage.
      • It is and remains a journal of theory, research and reportage but this does not make it non-partisan.
      • How much do we depend upon television for war reportage nowadays?

Origin

Early 17th century: French, from Old French reporter 'carry back' (see report).

Rhymes

barge, charge, enlarge, large, marge, raj, sarge, sparge, Swaraj, taj, undercharge

Definition of reportage in US English:

reportage

noun
  • 1The reporting of news, for the press and the broadcast media.

    新闻报道

    extensive reportage of elections

    对选举的大量报道。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Reality is no longer the trusted referent of ‘news’ programs, as visual re-creation and graphic manipulation join analysis and conjecture in supplanting documentation and reportage.
    • News is delivered not so much as reportage as an opinion piece.
    • Talk, in the form of reportage of ‘breaking news,’ including eyewitness reports and rumors, is the frontline mediator of the event itself.
    • In these terms, journalism is even compared to the scientific method, intimately connected with accumulation of facts and analysis, and reportage of evidence.
    • Despite the artist's efforts to reveal the artifice of traditional media reportage, he employs analogous documentary and camera techniques that similarly objectify them without ever rising to the level of critique.
    • It was a short step from such mainstream reportage to the reports of the FBI files, in which, as shown below, the FBI branded Baker as a serious threat and thoroughly racialized and politicized her.
    • It was a fascinating piece of reportage about an area of music that many people are unaware exists.
    • A less in-your-face approach and more informative style, with third person commentary, would have complemented the strengths of this fly-on-the-wall reportage.
    • His response was to create - in the Irish Times - the most significant Irish newspaper of the 20th century, with its reportage, critique and record.
    • It is impossible not to be reminded of the frenzied media reportage that has become the mainstay of American television news coverage.
    • The FBI, relying heavily on hearsay and reportage from the American press and even international presses, provided an extensive profile of Baker as a political threat.
    • Still, the hysteria reportage of the New York Times continues.
    • Design writing includes journalism, commentary, criticism, both popular and academic - it is practiced as essay, reportage, commentary, blurb, and now blog post.
    • In May this year, we covered the burgeoning ‘grime’ scene with a brilliant piece of reportage that followed its rising stars through clubland and back to their tower block roots.
    • It's interesting, I can see a distinction between how a curator like John Szarkowski might draw on news reportage and introduce his own juxtapositions of imagery.
    • As a successful journalist Mike is skilled in news reportage and knows the impact of the written word.
    • But, this is the story, once again, about how a perception gets started in the media thanks to shoddy reportage.
    • Either a journalist withers on the vine when they take a job like this or they become a corporate PR person following their bland, risk-averse PR orders i.e. a million miles away from the freedom of news desk reportage.
    • Her account of the siege, a condemnation of Luftwaffe bombing in Spain, is still a brilliant piece of reportage.
    • My point is, it's a fake stat, which is greatly subject to things like genre, the size of the Friday draw and even some slightly bent reportage.
    Synonyms
    reporting, description, treatment, handling, presentation
    1. 1.1 Factual presentation in a book or other text, especially when this adopts a journalistic style.
      报道文学,报告文学
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Their sense of play and reliance on narrative and metaphor made them vehicles for more than simple reportage and documentation.
      • Both films function as sharp reportage as well as stories of political threat and intrigue, and their tone's ultimately accusatory: there's a problem, and it's being ignored right now.
      • She published two volumes of reportage, Vietnam and Hanoi, protesting against American involvement in Vietnam.
      • I felt that at some point in this career as a reporter, a reporter ought to have written a book of reportage.
      • John Hodgkiss edited the diverse selection of reportage and portrait photographs illustrating the book.
      • Sometimes more reportage than art exhibition, the show failed to provide a rigorous historical analysis.
      • Though reportage, Hamlet's words are hard upon the action's heels.
      • It is and remains a journal of theory, research and reportage but this does not make it non-partisan.
      • Now as in the past, the claim of reportage has always stood as a disavowal of responsibility for the pictures' contents.
      • Forget the unwieldy title and worthy subject matter, this is a breathless piece of reportage, like a vintage New Yorker feature put to film: expansive, comic, digressive and ever so slightly demented.
      • Tillim is best known for his black-and-white reportage but he introduced colour at his 2003 exhibition at the same venue.
      • What only the war correspondents present at the time knew, he said, was that Scoop was actually a piece of straight reportage, thinly disguised as a novel.
      • Anecdote dominates many chapters, with unreflective reportage frequently doing duty for examination.
      • Throughout the album, Dead Prez move from bitter reportage, recounting tales of poverty and desperation, to impassioned calls to action.
      • A self-taught artist, Ferdinand achieves an appealing bluntness, with the detail and graphic quality of reportage, using watercolor, colored pencil and ballpoint pen.
      • Can images arising from a self apparently at ease internally and at peace with its environs ever produce images that surpass mere visual reportage?
      • How much do we depend upon television for war reportage nowadays?
      • Ataman uses film to explore the notion of true confessions and reportage.
      • Although enthusiastically received by its sold-out audience - a good portion of whom were clearly Burning Man alumni - it fails at the most basic level of documentary reportage.
      • Written by a senior officer who was there at the time, it's a combination of personal recollection and reportage.

Origin

Early 17th century: French, from Old French reporter ‘carry back’ (see report).

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更新时间:2024/11/11 5:34:12