a daily record, as of occurrences, experiences, or observations: She kept a journal during her European trip.
a newspaper, especially a daily one.
a periodical or magazine, especially one published for a special group, learned society, or profession: the October issue of The English Journal.
a record, usually daily, of the proceedings and transactions of a legislative body, an organization, etc.
Bookkeeping.
a daybook.
(in the double-entry method) a book into which all transactions are entered from the daybook or blotter to facilitate posting into the ledger.
Nautical. a log or logbook.
Machinery. the portion of a shaft or axle contained by a plain bearing.
verb (used without object)
to write self-examining or reflective journal entries, especially in school or as part of psychotherapy: Students should journal as part of a portfolio assessment program.
Origin of journal
First recorded in 1325–75; Middle English, from Old French journal “daily,” from Late Latin diurnālis; see diurnal
In the new study, published Wednesday in the journal Frontiers of Microbiology, researchers report how a specific type of bacteria on the International Space Station survived these harsh space elements for three whole years.
Clumps of bacteria could spread life between planets|Paola Rosa-Aquino|August 27, 2020|Popular Science
To determine who these people were, Justin Lehmiller, Kinsey Fellow and lead author of the original study in the journal Leisure Sciences, conducted a secondary analysis of the data.
Sexless in the City - Facts So Romantic|Anastasia Bendebury & Michael Shilo DeLay|August 11, 2020|Nautilus
“The idea with those journals is if you can get one publication in one of those journals, it kind of makes your career,” says economist Zoe McLaren, an associate professor at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County.
Only 17% of the studies published in top economics journals are by women|Karen Ho|August 5, 2020|Quartz
Her typical year’s output might include a scholarly book, articles in learned journals, encyclopedia entries, and short pieces in Good Housekeeping and Redbook that spun anthropological findings into practical advice.
Gender Is What You Make of It - Issue 88: Love & Sex|Charles King|August 5, 2020|Nautilus
The field was so underpopulated in those days, it didn’t even have its own journal.
He Found ‘Islands of Fertility’ Beneath Antarctica’s Ice|Steve Nadis|July 20, 2020|Quanta Magazine
The same Pediatrics journal notes that 17 states have some form of exception to the standard parental consent requirement.
Should Teens Have The Right To Die?|Brandy Zadrozny|January 8, 2015|DAILY BEAST
Later that morning I told him I was keeping a journal of our work together.
Alfred Hitchcock’s Fade to Black: The Great Director’s Final Days|David Freeman|December 13, 2014|DAILY BEAST
One hostage died en route, the Journal reported, while the other died on the operating table.
Did U.S. Policy Get Luke Somers Killed?|Shane Harris|December 6, 2014|DAILY BEAST
As he scribbled in his journal, “How to remain thin-skinned, vulnerable, and still alive?”
Why We Need Celebrity Scandals|Jessica Ferri|November 7, 2014|DAILY BEAST
He also is the editor of the journal, which seems to publish a lot of interesting if preliminary work.
All These AIDS ‘Cures’ Are a Fantasy—One That Can Cause Real Harm|Kent Sepkowitz|November 6, 2014|DAILY BEAST
According to the Journal des Débats, the greatest part of these papers have never been printed.
The International Monthly, Volume 3, No. 4, July, 1851|Various
Hence arises a great variety of impressions and remarks which we accordingly find in this journal.
Catholic World, Vol. XI, April 1870-September 1870|Various
It is not here, but in the pages of his Journal for ten years before, that we must search for the secret of d'Argenson's thought.
The Marquis D'Argenson: A Study in Criticism|Arthur Ogle
In it he placed a long "Extract from my journal," written with care in his beautiful handwriting and bound with a tiny ribbon.
The False Chevalier|William Douw Lighthall
To those who hold this opinion, the system of reverberating praise from one journal to another, must be unknown.
The American Quarterly Review|Various
British Dictionary definitions for journal
journal
/ (ˈdʒɜːnəl) /
noun
a newspaper or periodical
a book in which a daily record of happenings, etc, is kept
an official record of the proceedings of a legislative body
accounting
Also called: Book of Original Entryone of several books in which transactions are initially recorded to facilitate subsequent entry in the ledger
another name for daybook
the part of a shaft or axle in contact with or enclosed by a bearing
a plain cylindrical bearing to support a shaft or axle
Word Origin for journal
C14: from Old French: daily, from Latin diurnālis; see diurnal