correspondent
意味: A journalist who reports on a particular subject or from a particular region, especially for a newspaper or broadcasting organisation.
In British media, correspondents are senior specialist journalists — the BBC's political correspondent, the Guardian's Middle East correspondent, and so on. The title indicates expertise and authority on a beat. The word also has an older meaning of a person who writes letters (a pen correspondent), though this usage has faded. 'Foreign correspondent' is perhaps the most romantic and storied role in journalism.
例文
- The BBC's political correspondent reported live from Westminster as the vote was taking place. BBC的政治记者在投票进行时从威斯敏斯特进行了现场报道。El corresponsal político de la BBC informó en directo desde Westminster mientras se celebraba la votación.BBCの政治部記者は、投票が行われている最中にウェストミンスターから生中継で報道しました。BBC 정치부 기자는 투표가 진행되는 동안 웨스트민스터에서 생중계로 보도했습니다.
- She worked as a foreign correspondent in Beirut for nearly a decade before returning to London. 她在贝鲁特担任驻外记者近十年后回到伦敦。Trabajó como corresponsal en el extranjero en Beirut durante casi una década antes de regresar a Londres.彼女はロンドンに戻る前に、ベイルートで約10年間海外特派員として勤務しました。그녀는 런던으로 돌아오기 전 약 10년간 베이루트에서 해외 특파원으로 근무했습니다.
- The paper's health correspondent broke the story about contaminated blood supplies in the NHS. 该报的卫生记者率先报道了NHS受污染血液供应的事件。El corresponsal sanitario del periódico fue quien destapó la historia sobre el suministro de sangre contaminada en el NHS.その新聞の医療担当記者が、NHSの汚染血液供給に関するスクープを報じました。그 신문의 의료 담당 기자가 NHS의 오염된 혈액 공급에 관한 특종을 보도했습니다.
発音
使い方ガイド
場面: professional, media
トーン: neutral
起源と歴史
From medieval Latin correspondentem (one who corresponds), from correspondere (to correspond), combining cor- (together) and respondere (to respond). The journalistic sense emerged in the 19th century.
文化的背景
Era: Modern
Generation: All ages
Social background: Universal
このトピックの他の表現
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