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go on the air
verb as in broadcast
verb as in televise
Strong matches
Example Sentences
“They developed this tradition where anyone who’s used his program to pay off all their debt can go on the air with him on the radio and do what’s called a ‘debt-free scream.’
NFL Network wasn’t the first league-run channel to go on the air — that honor goes to NBA TV in 1999 — but it has been a driver in the league becoming year-around viewing as well as providing a template for making routine events into must watch.
It’s 25 minutes before I go on the air, and there’s a fan at the broadcast booth window telling me he’s not getting team emails anymore.
I didn’t think it would be responsible to have him go on the air.
Capitol, with the halls only recently cleared of rioters, Mr. Trump called into Mr. Dobbs’s program and wanted to go on the air.
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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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