noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a war correspondent (= a reporter sending reports from a war )
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Being a war correspondent is a dangerous job.
court correspondent
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
foreign
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And she told me some character called Steve produced a gun when Newman, the foreign correspondent , interrupted their tete-a-tete.
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It was all preparation for her dream job: a foreign correspondent , roaming the world in a trench coat.
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The movement was not all one way. Foreign correspondents , for instance, dropped sharply.
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Government officials failed also in another hide-and-seek game with foreign correspondents .
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Bob Newman, foreign correspondent , frowned as he drove his Mercedes 280E across the loneliness of Suffolk in February.
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The access of foreign correspondents to government officials and documents is comparable to that in the United States.
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Mark had idolised foreign correspondents ever since he began in newspapers.
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Even in the rarefied world of foreign correspondents , Simon is a standout.
political
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It's an analysis piece by our political correspondent , Mattie Storin.
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The political correspondents had all been carried away.
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Our political correspondent Fiona Ross is at Westminster and she joins us live.
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The reports of the political correspondents , who had all faxed their copy while still sober the evening before were generally downbeat.
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This report from our political correspondent , Fiona Ross.
■ NOUN
news
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Another wants to be an international news correspondent .
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Somehow news correspondents covering the administration, including me, never grasped the full extent of the guerrilla war within the administration.
newspaper
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The remarks of officials and newspaper correspondents provide detailed information about the crime.
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Such was the invitation which the newspaper correspondents received on the morning of August 1, 1861.
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During a recent three-year tour of duty as a newspaper correspondent in the Middle East I found abundant cause for both.
war
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Bill Herbert was fortunate to be sent overseas as a war correspondent .
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Neither one would make a good war correspondent .
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He would have made a lousy war correspondent .
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Being a war correspondent is a genuinely dangerous job, just like they portray it in the movies.
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Casimir left Dublin for the Balkans as a war correspondent and enlistment.
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For surveyors and civil engineers, relief workers and war correspondents , the ultimate mobile phone looks like a bargain.
■ VERB
become
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This became the necessary London correspondent and support of the quite prosperous Taylors &038; Lloyds.
write
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The bulletin includes articles from other publications as well as those written by its own correspondents throughout the region.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
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"Schools in Crisis", by our education correspondent Nick Bacon.
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a White House correspondent
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He joined ABC as its chief foreign correspondent in 2000.
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He left his local paper to become the Daily Telegraph's defence correspondent .
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Martin Bell worked for many years as the BBC's war correspondent , covering conflicts all over the world.
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We now go over to our correspondent in Lisbon for a report on the election.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
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Foreign publications have been criticised for alleged one-sided reporting and their correspondents have been denied visas.
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He fell in love with it; a lot of correspondents did.
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He has been a reporter, Washington correspondent , system editor, state editor and Baltimore County bureau chief.
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She was a reporter with the City Press, and an occasional correspondent for the Star - a radical national daily.
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So it was that her charisma and undoubted beauty helped to make her the first lady air correspondent in the world.
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Such was the invitation which the newspaper correspondents received on the morning of August 1, 1861.
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The bulletin includes articles from other publications as well as those written by its own correspondents throughout the region.
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This report from our political correspondent , Fiona Ross.