释义 |
photojournalism
pho·to·jour·nal·ism P0264500 (fō′tō-jûr′nə-lĭz′əm)n. Journalism in which a news story is presented primarily through photographs with supplementary written copy. pho′to·jour′nal·ist n.pho′to·jour′nal·is′tic adj.photojournalism (ˌfəʊtəʊˈdʒɜːnəˌlɪzəm) n (Journalism & Publishing) journalism in which photographs are the predominant feature ˌphotoˈjournalist n ˌphotoˌjournalˈistic adjpho•to•jour•nal•ism (ˌfoʊ toʊˈdʒɜr nlˌɪz əm) n. journalism in which the story is told largely in captioned photographs. [1940–45] pho`to•jour′nal•ist, n. photojournalisma form of journalism in which photographs play a more important part than written copy. — photojournalist, n.See also: Photography a form of journalism in which photographs play a more important part than written copy. — photojournalist, n.See also: MediaThesaurusNoun | 1. | photojournalism - journalism that presents a story primarily through the use of picturesjournalism, news media - newspapers and magazines collectivelynews photography - photography of newsworthy eventsrotogravure - printed material (text and pictures) produced by an intaglio printing process in a rotary press | Translations
Photojournalism
Photojournalism the reportage of current events through photographs appearing in newspapers, in magazines, and on special bulletin boards, such as those of PHOTO TASS. In contrast to the documentary art of photography, photojournalism often makes use of photographs that lack aesthetic value; the pictures are chosen primarily on the basis of their historical and cognitive merits. photojournalism
Words related to photojournalismnoun journalism that presents a story primarily through the use of picturesRelated Words- journalism
- news media
- news photography
- rotogravure
|