New-journalism
noun
1.
journalism containing the writer’s personal opinions and reactions and often fictional asides as added color.
noun
1.
a style of journalism originating in the US in the 1960s, which uses techniques borrowed from fiction to portray a situation or event as vividly as possible
Read Also:
- New-kensington
noun 1. a city in W Pennsylvania.
- New kid
noun a newcomer; a new arrival; a person who is new to a situation or activity Usage Note usu. new kid in town, new kid on the block
- New kid on the block
noun phrase Any newcomer or recent arrival: The newest kid on that ostentatious block is O’Neal, who, after signing with Orlando, was snatched up by Reebok
- Newlands
/ˈnjuːləndz/ noun 1. John Alexander. 1838–98, British chemist: classified the elements in order of their atomic weight, noticing similarities in every eighth and thus discovering his law of octaves
- New-latin
noun 1. the Latin that became current, notably in scientific literature, after the Renaissance, c1500. Abbreviation: NL, NL., N.L. noun 1. the form of Latin used since the Renaissance, esp for scientific nomenclature Also called Neo-Latin