English
Etymology
From French journalisme (beginning of 19th century). By surface analysis, journal + -ism.
Pronunciation
Noun
journalism (usually uncountable, plural journalisms)
- The aggregating, writing, editing, and presenting of news or news articles for widespread distribution, typically in electronic publications, broadcast news media, or printed newspapers or periodicals, for the purpose of informing the audience, relying on a style of writing characteristic for this purpose, consisting of direct presentation of facts or events and (depending on type) either with or without analysis or interpretation.
- Meronym: reporting (little to no analysis or interpretation)
2022 October 31, Alison Hill, “5 Myths of Journalism: Journalist Alison Hill shares five myths of journalism and breaks down how they started and why they're inaccurate”, in Writer's Digest[1]:Myth #1—Journalism Is Dying. Journalism is not dying; it’s evolving. We’re witnessing the shift from the legacy media dominance to the endless possibilities offered by the digital age. A journalist is responsible for gathering and organizing material and distributing the finished (and verified) pieces through various formats and mediums, which used to be limited to television, radio, and print. Traditional media gatekeepers have been strict on who qualifies to do the reporting and what can be published. Now, the playing field is wide open, and the rules are rapidly changing. What remains consistent is the purpose of journalism, which the American Press Institute claims is “to provide citizens with the information they need to make the best possible decisions about their lives, their communities, their societies, and their governments.”
Derived terms
Translations
activity or profession of being a journalist
- Afrikaans: joernalistiek
- Albanian: gazetari (sq) f
- Arabic: صِحَافَة f (ṣiḥāfa), صَحَافَة f (ṣaḥāfa)
- Egyptian Arabic: صحافة f (ṣiḥāfa)
- Armenian: լրագրություն (hy) (lragrutʻyun)
- Asturian: periodismu m
- Azerbaijani: jurnalistika
- Belarusian: журналі́стыка f (žurnalístyka)
- Bengali: জার্নালিজম (jarnalijom)
- Breton: kazetennerezh (br) m
- Bulgarian: журнали́стика (bg) f (žurnalístika)
- Burmese: သတင်းစာပညာ (sa.tang:capa.nya)
- Carpathian Rusyn: журналі́стіка f (žurnalístika)
- Catalan: jornalisme (ca) m, periodisme (ca) m
- Cebuano: dyornalismo, peryodismo
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 新聞學 / 新闻学 (zh) (xīnwénxué), 新聞界 / 新闻界 (zh) (xīnwénjiè), 新聞業 / 新闻业 (zh) (xīnwényè), 新聞工作 / 新闻工作 (xīnwén gōngzuò)
- Czech: novinářství n, žurnalistika f
- Danish: journalistik
- Dutch: journalistiek (nl)
- Esperanto: ĵurnalismo
- Estonian: ajakirjandus
- Finnish: journalismi (fi)
- French: journalisme (fr) m
- Galician: periodismo m, xornalismo m
- Georgian: ჟურნალისტიკა (žurnalisṭiḳa)
- German: Journalismus (de) m, Journalistik (de) f
- Greek: δημοσιογραφία (el) f (dimosiografía)
- Gujarati: please add this translation if you can
- Hebrew: עיתונאות \ עִתּוֹנָאוּת (he) f (itona'út)
- Hindi: पत्रकारिता f (patrakāritā)
- Hungarian: újságírás (hu)
- Icelandic: blaðamennska f, fréttamennska (is) f
- Ido: jurnalisteso (io)
- Indonesian: jurnalisme (id), kewartawanan (id)
- Italian: giornalismo (it) m
- Japanese: ジャーナリズム (ja) (jānarizumu)
- Kazakh: журналистика (jurnalistika)
- Khmer: វិជ្ជាជីវៈខាងសារព័ត៌មាន (vɨcciəciivĕəʼ khaang saapɔədɑɑmiən)
- Korean: 저널리즘 (jeoneollijeum), 언론학(言論學) (ko) (eollonhak)
- Kurdish:
- Northern Kurdish: rojnamegerî (ku), rojnamevanî (ku)
- Kyrgyz: журналистика (ky) (jurnalistika)
- Lao: ວາລະສານສາດ (wā la sān sāt)
- Latin: diurnalismus m
- Latvian: žurnālistika f
- Lithuanian: žurnalistika f
- Macedonian: новина́рство n (novinárstvo)
- Malay: kewartawanan
- Mongolian:
- Cyrillic: сэтгүүл зүй (setgüül züj)
- Norwegian: journalistikk
- Ottoman Turkish: غزتهجیلق (gazetacılık)
- Pannonian Rusyn: новинарство n (novinarstvo)
- Pashto: روزنامه نګاري f (roznāmanegārí), ژورناليزم m (žurnalízǝm)
- Persian: ژورنالیسم (fa) (žurnâlisem), روزنامهنگاری (ruz-nâme-negâri), روزنامهنویسی (ruz-nâme-nevisi), خبرنگاری (xabarnegâri)
- Plautdietsch: Zeitungschreft f
- Polish: dziennikarstwo (pl) n
- Portuguese: jornalismo (pt) m, periodismo m
- Romanian: jurnalism (ro)
- Russian: журнали́стика (ru) f (žurnalístika)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: новина́рство n, журналѝстика f
- Roman: novinárstvo (sh) n, žurnalìstika (sh) f
- Sicilian: jurnalismu
- Slovak: žurnalistika f, novinárstvo n
- Slovene: novinarstvo (sl) n
- Spanish: periodismo (es) m
- Swedish: journalistik (sv)
- Tagalog: pamamahayagan, pamahayagan
- Tajik: рӯзноманигорӣ (tg) (rüznomanigori), журналистика (tg) (žurnalistika)
- Tatar: журналистика (jurnalistika)
- Telugu: please add this translation if you can
- Thai: วารสารศาสตร์ (waa-rá-sǎan-sàat)
- Tibetan: གསར་འགོད (gsar 'god)
- Turkish: gazetecilik (tr)
- Turkmen: žurnalistika
- Ukrainian: журналі́стика f (žurnalístyka)
- Urdu: صحافت f (sahāfat), اخبار نویسی (axbār navīsī), خبر نگاری (xabar-nigārī), خبر نویسی (xabar-navīsī), نامہ نگاری (nāma-nigārī), صحیفہ نگاری (sahīfa-nigārī), مضمون نگاری (mazmūn nigārī), خبر رسانی (xabar-rasānī), روز نامہ نویسی (roz-nāma-navīsī), وقائع نگاری (waqāe-nigārī), وقائع نویسی (waqāe-navīsī), واقعہ نگاری (vāqea-nigārī), واقعہ نویسی (vāqea-navīsī)
- Uyghur: ئاخباراتچىلىق (axbaratchiliq)
- Uzbek: jurnalistika (uz)
- Vietnamese: nghề làm báo, nghề viết báo
- Võro: aokirändüs
- Welsh: newyddiaduraeth (cy)
- Yiddish: זשורנאַליזם m (zhurnalizm), זשורנאַליסטיק f (zhurnalistik)
|