Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb Simple past tense and past participle of
editorialise .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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If I want thinly veiled editorialised headlines that attempt to maintain a hopeless fiction of impartiality, I'll read a newspaper.
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In 1854 The Albany Register editorialised a convention meeting at which she spoke thus:
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It marks something of a coming of age for the channel, which was formed in 1996 and has succeeded in shaking up the world of television news with its mix of highly partisan rightwing commentary and often heavily editorialised news.
Rupert Murdoch's Fox News joins inner circle at White House 2010
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His BBC 6.00 News piece editorialised that one of Obama's tasks was "to repair the damage done by George Bush" (which begs several questions), that "the fact that he's not George Bush" is one of Obama's "best political assets" as regards the 'Muslim World' & that "THIS president is good with words" (in contrast to whom Jeremy?)
Open Thread 2009
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My grad school lab books are rather editorialised.
A notebook to remember Amanda 2008
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Perhaps I might have some idea what had happened if I could read between the ridiculously editorialised lines in this article.
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The New Statesman editorialised last September about the dangers of subsidising bigotry.
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The New Statesman editorialised last September about the dangers of subsidising bigotry.
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News24's black broadsheet, City Press, editorialised that the
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In addition a few prominent journals have editorialised in highly personalized terms for the Hockey Team and especially Michael Mann and against McIntyre and McKitrick, refusing them the right of reply.
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