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report
noun as in account, story
Strongest matches
address, announcement, article, communique, description, detail, dispatch, information, message, news, note, opinion, paper, picture, record, release, statement, summary, word
Strong matches
brief, broadcast, cable, chronicle, communication, declaration, digest, handout, history, narration, narrative, outline, piece, proclamation, pronouncement, recital, relation, rundown, scoop, tale, telegram, tidings, version, wire
Weak matches
noun as in gossip, talk
Strong matches
buzz, canard, chat, chatter, chitchat, conversation, cry, dirt, earful, grapevine, hash, hearsay, intelligence, murmur, prating, rumble, scuttlebutt, tattle, tidings, whispering
Weak matches
noun as in loud noise
Strong matches
bang, blast, boom, crack, crash, detonation, discharge, explosion, reverberation, sound
verb as in communicate information, knowledge
Strongest matches
account for, announce, broadcast, declare, describe, detail, disclose, document, inform, list, mention, note, notify, present, publish, record, reveal, tell
Strong matches
advise, air, cable, circulate, cover, enunciate, impart, inscribe, itemize, narrate, proclaim, promulgate, recite, recount, rehearse, relate, relay, retail, spread, state, summarize, telephone, trumpet, wire
Weak matches
bring word, give an account of, give the facts, make known, make public, pass on, provide details, set forth, write up
Example Sentences
The report from the 24 agents, entitled “A Pulse Check of the First Six Months,” was obtained by the New York Post.
At least 12 people have died and around 50 are still missing after a landslide struck two boats docked at a river port in Peru's Amazon rainforest region, local media reports.
The study, reported in The Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, was conducted by a team of Egyptian paleontologists.
Neuroscientists at the University of Cambridge report that the human brain moves through five "major epochs" as it rewires itself from early development to late old age.
Researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine report that they have successfully used a "zap-and-freeze" method to capture rapid communication between brain cells in living tissue from both mice and humans.
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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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