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newsletter
[ nooz-let-er, nyooz- ]
noun
- a written report, issued periodically, typically by a business, institution, or other organization, that presents information and news to people with a specific interest in the organization or subject:
our co-op’s monthly newsletter;
an employee newsletter.
- a written report and analysis of the news, often providing forecasts, typically directed at a special audience, as businesspeople, and distributed to subscribers:
a stock-market newsletter.
newsletter
/ ˈnjuːzˌlɛtə /
noun
- Also callednews-sheet a printed periodical bulletin circulated to members of a group
- history a written or printed account of the news
Word History and Origins
Origin of newsletter1
Example Sentences
Perhaps you’ve noticed that it’s Thursday, not Friday, the day you would typically receive this newsletter.
Revenue comes from custom content campaigns, podcast and newsletter sponsorship.
While the newsletter has nearly 40,000 subscribers, it’s fair to say that posting Q&A’s on a platform like LinkedIn isn’t exactly poised to break the internet the way, say, a YouTube show or a New York Times column might.
They are regularly discussing issues related to diversity and inclusion on Slack and in internal newsletters.
Because courses newsletters have a lot of growth trajectories, the metrics for success that publishers look for will be different.
The first issue ended up being closer to an industry newsletter than an actual magazine.
Father Thomas Reese, who writes for National Catholic Reporter, said in a newsletter to journalists that the document is dull.
It seemed to me that "Jewish" was what Jews did, and I wrote something to this effect in McGill Hillel's newsletter.
To stop subscribing to a Republican newsletter from Charleston.
“He is in an impossible position,” says Jon Ralston, who operates an eponymous website and newsletter devoted to Nevada politics.
But your newsletter says, that an assay was made of the coin.
According to a royalist newsletter, while in the Tower she was threatened with the rack to extort information.
But since the Revolution the newsletter had become a more important political engine than it had previously been.
That was a memorable day on which the first newsletter from London was laid on the table of the only coffee room in Cambridge.
This organization provides a newsletter and emergency news flashes that give extensive information on issues, ideas, and contacts.
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