Turning to our first source, thenewsletters of Rome, and the letters of Kent, the dates in each case prove that Kent, with variations, follows the newsletters.
The newsletters were distributed by post,[254] and the news which they contained was for the most part obtained through the agency of the Post Office from correspondents in various parts of the country.
This gave him an advantage over other journalists, and his newsletters and newsbooks became extremely popular.
L'Estrange's privilege put an end to Muddiman's newsbooks, but in no way interfered with his newsletters and his right to free postage.
Newsletters and correspondence of the time are all filled with the details of the exploit, for the moment the gravest affairs of state sunk into insignificance before the interest in this most audacious venture.
However, as a general principle, it seems clear that the scope of the fair use doctrine should be considerably narrower in the case of newsletters than in that of either mass-circulation periodicals or scientific journals.
It is argued that newsletters are particularly vulnerable to mass photocopying, and that most newsletters have fairly modest circulations.
Agostino left behind him in England a secret agent, with instructions to forward a weekly report on the progress of affairs to the Venetian ambassador in France, among whose dispatches we find these newsletters from London.
Newsletters were rapidly followed by regular newspapers, which supplied their readers with somewhat imaginative accounts of the debates.
A system of newsletters had been started with the Restoration, whereby the outside world could learn something of the doings of Parliament.
One of his employments had been to send newsletters to Heinsius.
Some interesting extracts from those newsletters will be found in the work of the Baron Sirtema de Grovestins.
The newsletters of one writer named Dyer were widely circulated in manuscript.
The newsletters of the period from Madrid are simply a collection of atrocious scandals touching {268} the honour of the highest people in the Court.
Novoa and, also for other details, Newsletters in Valladares' Semanario Erudito, vol.
Rodriguez Villa's Newsletters have much to say about this.
In the Rodriguez Villa's Newsletters at this period, hardly a week passes without reference to the selling up of some nobleman's belongings for debt.
Newsletters conveyed to every part of the kingdom fabulous accounts of the size and strength of the invaders.
I have myself seen two manuscript newsletters describing the pomp of the Prince's entrance into Exeter.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "newsletters" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.