| 释义 | 
		Definition of newspaperwoman in English: newspaperwomannounPlural newspaperwomenˈnjuːspeɪpəˌwʊmənˈnjuːzpeɪpəˌwʊmənˈn(j)uzˌpeɪpərˌwʊmən A female newspaper journalist.  they only printed what he said to the newspaperwoman  Example sentencesExamples -  "Who's the next generation of readers and how do we appeal to them?" said panelist and veteran newspaperwoman Hall at the September panel.
 -  In 1892 three acquaintances of this Black newspaperwoman were lynched in Memphis, Tennessee.
 -  This is a definitive biography of the crusading newspaperwoman of the late 19th century who sued a railroad for kicking her out of the "ladies' car", campaigned against lynching, and crusaded in the suffragist movement.
 -  As a newspaperwoman, she observed her neighbors at close range and acquired an intimate knowledge of the oppressive conditions that circumscribed their lives.
 -  Drawing on the history of the 1962 World's Fair and its Space Needle, Mr Lynch pairs unlikely antagonists: an old-school political fixer blessed with immense charm, and an overeager newspaperwoman whose research, done in 2001, has the power to destroy him.
 -  A newspaperwoman by training, Ms Jacobs wrote many highly regarded books on dollhouses.
 -  They only printed what he said to the newspaperwoman, but they never said what she said.
 -  I began drinking seriously when I was 22, just out of college and beginning my career as a newspaperwoman.
 -  Gray uses the writings of a Michigan newspaperwoman, who is the daughter of an Odawa Indian father and a white mother, to show that race and racial thinking were crucial ingredients in the formation of a Midwestern regional consciousness.
 -  The newspaperwoman turned best-selling author whose sprawling novels of Ireland portrayed women confronting all manner of adversity, died on Monday in Dublin.
 -  I can't do the math, because I am a dyed-in-the-wool newspaperwoman.
 -  Her obituary called her one of the most remarkable newspaperwoman of her time.
 -  One of the old-timers at the alumni emeritus dinner this year was newspaperwoman and publicist Shirley Lowry Haas, PhB'44.
 -  Early in 1960, a frail, pretty, twenty-two-year-old newspaperwoman, started a column of criticism.
 
    Definition of newspaperwoman in US English: newspaperwomannounˈn(y)o͞ozˌpāpərˌwo͝omənˈn(j)uzˌpeɪpərˌwʊmən A female newspaper journalist.  they only printed what he said to the newspaperwoman  Example sentencesExamples -  One of the old-timers at the alumni emeritus dinner this year was newspaperwoman and publicist Shirley Lowry Haas, PhB'44.
 -  This is a definitive biography of the crusading newspaperwoman of the late 19th century who sued a railroad for kicking her out of the "ladies' car", campaigned against lynching, and crusaded in the suffragist movement.
 -  A newspaperwoman by training, Ms Jacobs wrote many highly regarded books on dollhouses.
 -  I began drinking seriously when I was 22, just out of college and beginning my career as a newspaperwoman.
 -  Drawing on the history of the 1962 World's Fair and its Space Needle, Mr Lynch pairs unlikely antagonists: an old-school political fixer blessed with immense charm, and an overeager newspaperwoman whose research, done in 2001, has the power to destroy him.
 -  Gray uses the writings of a Michigan newspaperwoman, who is the daughter of an Odawa Indian father and a white mother, to show that race and racial thinking were crucial ingredients in the formation of a Midwestern regional consciousness.
 -  I can't do the math, because I am a dyed-in-the-wool newspaperwoman.
 -  "Who's the next generation of readers and how do we appeal to them?" said panelist and veteran newspaperwoman Hall at the September panel.
 -  As a newspaperwoman, she observed her neighbors at close range and acquired an intimate knowledge of the oppressive conditions that circumscribed their lives.
 -  They only printed what he said to the newspaperwoman, but they never said what she said.
 -  In 1892 three acquaintances of this Black newspaperwoman were lynched in Memphis, Tennessee.
 -  Her obituary called her one of the most remarkable newspaperwoman of her time.
 -  Early in 1960, a frail, pretty, twenty-two-year-old newspaperwoman, started a column of criticism.
 -  The newspaperwoman turned best-selling author whose sprawling novels of Ireland portrayed women confronting all manner of adversity, died on Monday in Dublin.
 
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