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Definitions

newsmonger

[nooz-mong-ger, -muhng-, nyooz-] / ˈnuzˌmɒŋ gər, -ˌmʌŋ-, ˈnyuz- /










Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Tillman is a newsmonger, whose disagreeable imposture does not prevent his comic confrere from getting the real scoop on the squealer mystery.

From Time Magazine Archive

When an old mustached rascal startled a credulous world by asserting that he had discovered the North Pole, Philip Gibbs, then a sharp-witted newsmonger, investigated.

From Time Magazine Archive

I never wish myself an unversed writer and newsmonger but when I write to you.

From Letters of John Keats to His Family and Friends by Keats, John

She did not know that a newsmonger is never respected, nor did she know that no girl whose nature was refined would care to know other people's business.

From Dorothy Dainty at Glenmore by Brooks, Amy

You are ceasing to be a man and becoming merely an editor—no, not even an editor—a newsmonger, one of the world's gossips.

From A Day of Fate by Roe, Edward Payson




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