| CHURNALISM | • churnalism n. (Derogatory) The use of ready-made press release material copied wholesale into a newspaper article… • CHURNALISM n. a type of journalism that relies on reusing existing material such as press releases and wire service reports instead of original research. |
| DIURNALIST | • diurnalist n. (Obsolete) A journalist. • DIURNALIST n. (archaic) a journalist. |
| EBURNATION | • eburnation n. A degenerative process of bone, occurring at sites of articular cartilage erosion and commonly found… • EBURNATION n. an abnormal change of bone by which it becomes very hard and dense. |
| JOURNALESE | • journalese n. A style of writing used in some newspapers and magazines, characterized by cliché, hyperbolic language… • JOURNALESE n. the jargon of bad journalism. |
| JOURNALING | • journaling n. The activity of keeping a diary, or journal. • journaling n. (Computing, by extension) The change log of the file system or database. • journaling v. Present participle of journal. |
| JOURNALISE | • journalise v. (British spelling) Alternative spelling of journalize. • JOURNALISE v. to write for or in a journal, also JOURNALIZE. |
| JOURNALISM | • journalism n. The activity or profession of being a journalist. • journalism n. The aggregating, writing, editing, and presenting of news or news articles for widespread distribution… • journalism n. The style of writing characteristic of material in periodical print publications and broadcast news… |
| JOURNALIST | • journalist n. (Originally) The keeper of a personal journal, who writes in it regularly. • journalist n. One whose occupation is journalism, originally only writing in the printed press. • journalist n. A reporter, someone who professionally reports on news and current events. |
| JOURNALIZE | • journalize v. (Transitive) To record in a journal. • journalize v. (Intransitive) To write in a journal; to keep a journal. • JOURNALIZE v. to enter or record in a journal or diary, also JOURNALISE. |
| JOURNALLED | • journalled v. Simple past tense and past participle of journal. • JOURNAL v. to record in a journal. |
| NOCTURNALS | • nocturnals n. Plural of nocturnal. • NOCTURNAL n. a nocturnal creature. |
| RETURNABLE | • returnable adj. Capable of being returned. • returnable n. Something that can be returned. • RETURNABLE adj. that can be returned. |
| SATURNALIA | • saturnalia n. A period or occasion of general license, in which the passions or vices have riotous indulgence; a period… • Saturnalia prop.n. An Ancient Roman holiday honoring the deity Saturn. • Saturnalia prop.n. A taxonomic genus within the order Saurischia – a dinosaur from the Triassic period. |
| TOURNAMENT | • tournament n. (Historical) During the Middle Ages, a series of battles and other contests designed to prepare knights for war. • tournament n. A series of games; either the same game played many times, or a succession of games related by a single… • tournament n. (Graph theory) A digraph obtained by assigning a direction to each edge in an undirected complete graph. |
| TURNABOUTS | • turnabouts n. Plural of turnabout. • turn-abouts n. Plural of turn-about. • turn␣abouts n. Plural of turn about. |
| TURNAGAINS | • turnagains n. Plural of turnagain. • TURNAGAIN n. (archaic) a refrain. |
| TURNAROUND | • turnaround n. The act of turning to face in the other direction. • turnaround n. A reversal of policy. • turnaround n. The time required to carry out a task. |
| UNBURNABLE | • unburnable adj. That is difficult or impossible to burn. • UNBURNABLE adj. that cannot be burned. |
| UNTURNABLE | • unturnable adj. Not turnable. • UNTURNABLE adj. that cannot be turned. |