Newspaper vs Guardianista - What's the difference?
newspaper | guardianista |
(countable) A publication, usually published daily or weekly and usually printed on cheap, low-quality paper, containing news and other articles.
* {{quote-book, year=1963, author=(Margery Allingham), title=(The China Governess)
, chapter=18 (uncountable, countable) A quantity of or one of the types of paper on which newspapers are printed.
To cover with newspaper.
(transitive) To engage in the business of journalism (usually used only in the gerund, newspapering)
(obsolete) to harrass in newspaper articles.
(British, slang, derogatory) A reader of the newspaper, regarded as middle-class, excessively liberal and politically correct, etc.
* 2005 , Tim Worstall, 2005: Dispatches from the Blogosphere
* 2007 , Adam Thorpe, Between Each Breath
* 2007 , Better an engine driver than a Guardianista!'' (''Daily Mail , 10 December 2007)
As nouns the difference between newspaper and guardianista
is that newspaper is (countable) a publication, usually published daily or weekly and usually printed on cheap, low-quality paper, containing news and other articles while guardianista is (british|slang|derogatory) a reader of the newspaper, regarded as middle-class, excessively liberal and politically correct, etc.As a verb newspaper
is to cover with newspaper.newspaper
English
(wikipedia newspaper)Noun
citation, passage=‘Then the father has a great fight with his terrible conscience,’ said Munday with granite seriousness. ‘Should he make a row with the police […]? Or should he say nothing about it and condone brutality for fear of appearing in the newspapers ?}}
Synonyms
* (publication) daily (for a daily newspaper''), paper, rag (''derogatory ) * (paper on which newspapers are printed) newsprintDerived terms
* newspaperdom * newspaperismVerb
(en verb)- She newspapered one end of the room before painting the bookcase.
- He newspapered his way through the South on the sports beat, avoiding dry towms.
- He was newspapered out of public life.
Usage notes
* The harrass sense is usually in passive constructions. 1000 English basic wordsguardianista
English
Noun
(en noun)- And so the Guardianista is prepared for a tragic story of injustice and retribution, brought about by the evil that stalks the dark corners of cyberspace.
- the shrieking 'Guardianista' class and poor old Trevor Norris, because Trevor Norris was a local pain in the arse who'd once opposed a Heath development...
- But if councils were still run part-time by engine drivers — not self-regarding, pious Guardianistas — at the very least we'd get our dustbins emptied once a week.