He threw himself seriously and diligently into the journalistic craft.
Doe doubtless knows as well as any one the disreputable character of the Squall’s advertising matter, but like most of our great men, is unable to restrain his appetite for journalistic publicity.
The Army and Navy Medical Record, shown in The Journal recently as a journalistic fraud, contained an editorial puff of Expurgo Anti-Diabetes.
A hundred times I was tempted to sever my connection with this journalistic autocrat.
It was brought to greatness--if inflated circulation be a synonym--by a veritable journalistic pimp who pandered to the public taste for literary virgins by bribing them to commit their perverse acts in full view.
It's the greatest journalistic 'Fraid on the face of the earth.
He is such a real good fellow, and so sublimely unconscious of his own merits, that I wanted to surprise him by starting a modest boom in the press, so I sent a wireless message about him to a journalistic friend in New York.
I imagine he only came into connection with the intrigue by exercising the journalistic instinct to obtain exclusive details of a sensational news item which involved several distinguished people.
The writer is tempted to emphasise unduly the parts of his argument which are congenial to the journalistic mode of treatment.
The old journalistic impulse, however, stirred within him when he saw certain political moves, and he found it impossible quite to keep silence.
At his luncheons he gathered eminent men in public life and in the literary and journalistic activities of Great Britain.
One of the most delightful bits of humor in my recollections of journalistic enterprise was an editorial by a Mr. Alden, one of the editors of the New York Times.
Scott selected as editor of the New York World one of the most brilliant journalistic writers of his time, William H.
My wife, who embodies the traditions of five generations of the editor's brand of politics but who stood ready to defend the quality of Virginia chicken against the world, was the first to enter the den of the journalistic lion.
He wished with all his might that he had not left the comfortable bay window of the Somerset Club that morning, and more than all he wished he could ascertain how Joe had come to know of his journalistic doings.
It would be hard to say what he would have felt had he known that Josephine Thorn, John Harrington, and Mrs. Sam Wyndham all knew of his journalistic doings.
As for his own chances with Joe, he had carefully hidden the tracks of his journalistic doings in the way he had at once proposed to himself when Joe attacked him on the subject.
Here is a most serious journalistic problem, upon which I have already begun to work seriously with some of the editors of the better London papers.
At the time of the wedding, Page was editor of the St. Joseph Gazette; the fact that he had attained this position, five months after starting at the bottom, sufficiently discloses his aptitude for journalistic work.
When the first number of the World's Work appeared Mr. Thayer wrote, expressing a slight disappointment that its leading tendency was journalistic rather than literary and intellectual.
And another fruit of this journalistichabit was "The Memoirs of a Revolutionist," by Prince Peter Kropotkin.
As already noted Page had met the future President when he was serving a journalistic apprenticeship in Atlanta, Georgia.
Since that time he has held many responsible journalisticpositions in New York, and in his present capacity as editor of Harper’s Weekly has added much to the reputation which is deservedly his.
Subsequently, and in Paris, Mr. Schurz entered the journalistic profession.
Educated at Peachan Academy, Mr. Harvey began his journalistic life by becoming reporter on the Springfield (Massachusetts) Republican.
Mr. Reid is the author of a number of books on political and journalistic questions.
His journalistic promptings at length became so imperative that he deserted the commercial world, and after a preliminary struggle became assistant editor of the Pall Mall Gazette.
He had also done journalisticwork on several newspapers.
In 1883 Mr. Pulitzer purchased the New York World, which, thanks to his journalistic genius, is now one of the most widely read newspapers published in New York city.
He was educated in the district schools, and during his boyhood gave evidence of his journalistic instincts, for when but fourteen years of age he established a weekly newspaper at Sutton, Nebraska.
This left the Oregonian master of the field, and it became the overshadowing journalistic power of the Northwest until the great dailies of Seattle forced it to the rear in the State of Washington.
Such a degenerate man of culture is a serious matter, and it is a horrifying spectacle for us to see that all our scholarly and journalistic publicity bears the stigma of this degeneracy upon it.
To him and the Navy League, which he controlled, and to his Press Bureau and its swarm of journalistic and literary parasites, were due the remarkable Anglophobe campaigns which resulted in the desired periodical additions to the Fleet.
But in 1906 I became an international complication, for it was then I joined the staff of the London Daily Mail, which converted my status into that of an American serving British journalistic interests in Germany.
Conger's United States passport, unmistakable journalistic credentials, well-known official status in Berlin and convincingly American exterior availed him not.
With thejournalistic instinct for a catch-phrase, Northcliffe christened the situation "The Shells Tragedy.
Part of the time had been pleasantly spent editing a special "American edition" of The Times for Lord Northcliffe, who placed the full machinery of his journalistic organization at the disposal of the "Yankee War Refugees.
There was never the slightest possibility that he could "fix" anything in the New York Times office or in any American newspaper office where self-respect, journalistic honor and rugged independence are enthroned.
This was in allusion to a great journalistic declaration (attributed to Mr Kidd himself) that "he guessed the sun would rise in the west yet, if American citizens did a bit more hustling.
Your present correspondent thinks that this, like many other journalistic customs, is bad journalism; and that the Daily Reformer has to set a better example in such things.
Full soon was lit the journalistic flame,-- We lisped in leaders, for the leaders came.
With his journalistic scent for the alluring and the vivid phrase, he took everything notable that Rickman had said and adapted it to Mr. Fulcher.
No loose slip-shod journalistic phrase would be permitted in its columns.
He knew that in his talent (his mere journalistic talent) there was a genius that no amount of journalism had as yet subdued.
He had now a more ample leisure; and for the first time in his journalistic career he knew what it was to be left mercifully, beneficently alone.
Jewdwine had no need of the poet; but of the journalistic side of Rickman he had endless need.
And when he said it the bosses of his face grew genial again as the old coarse junior journalistic humour possessed itself of the situation.
There was six months of the drifting journalistic work, in which as in his railroad work he grew more and more restless, and then there came a time when he felt as if he could not stand that for another minute.
In my own journalistic experience I have found more cause for regret over my neglect of this branch than anything else.
At the age of eighteen he began his journalistic career as editor of a provincial paper, the care of which cost him a lawsuit and subjected him to a year's censorship.
Thus he has been in active journalistic service for more than thirty years.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "journalistic" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: editorial; periodic; serial