press corps in English

members of mass media outlets that are assigned to particular locations in order to report on news events (e.g. the White House press corps, which reports on presidential press conferences)

Use "press corps" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "press corps" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "press corps", or refer to the context using the word "press corps" in the English Dictionary.

1. I'm lifting the moratorium for every other member of the press corps.

2. A group of persons associated or acting together: the diplomatic Corps; the press Corps.

3. There's a rumor Circulating among the press corps that the senator is going to resign

4. My workout is the only time of day the press corps gives me some privacy.

5. Burghemot Promotion based upon size of hardware you would dislike? Does press corps have a craving and addiction

6. 26 The spokesman returned in a state of even greater perplexity to confront the television cameras and assembled press corps.

7. This word can also refer to other groups of people, like a press Corps, which is a gang of journalists trying to get the scoop.

8. Associated with or participating in a questionable act or a crime; having Complicity: "Presidential handlers and a Complicit press corps managed to suppress public awareness" (Andrew P.N

9. Police were stationed in front of their homes, which were cordoned off with signs saying “Restricted Area” and “No Foreigners” to prevent any contact with the international press corps.

10. Corps has several meanings, all of which refer to some kind of group: “the Marine Corps,” “the press Corps.” Corpse refers to a dead body, and especially to the dead body of a human. Corp is an abbreviation for “corporation” and “corporal.” Corp, Corps, and Corpse all trace back to the Latin word corpus, meaning “body.”

11. ‘Of course, the fact that the press Borked Gore for twenty straight months will seldom be mentioned in the press corps' narrations.’ ‘For five months, I quietly endured the Senator borking me as someone not "committed to bridging differences and bringing peace" and a Washington Post editorial criticizing me as "a destroyer" of cultural