English to Nepalese Dictionary newsworthy

newsworthy

newsworthy
definition
adjective
you had to cover a lot of ground to find anything newsworthy
noteworthy as news; topical.
example
I'm not sure there's going to be anything else that is going to be 'newsworthy' to call a press conference.
However, in terms of the quality of speech, what counts as 'newsworthy' is an important discussion.
News is always more 'newsworthy' if it could affect me, or you, or someone we know, or someone that they know.
Reporters who witnessed the incidents evidently did not regard the events as 'newsworthy' .
Navy News picked it up from Army Newspaper and deemed it 'newsworthy' .
The event was deemed 'newsworthy' , with this report appearing in the Taranaki Herald two days later.
If he had said anything 'newsworthy' or interesting, we would have covered it.
Relationships are only 'newsworthy' and notable if there's a lot of money involved.
On the surface it promotes the idea that the New York Times will cover all 'newsworthy' events.
This is also true when they withhold, altogether, stories they know to be 'newsworthy' and of public interest.
A journal editor, for example, has an interest in publishing controversial or 'newsworthy' articles that will be quoted.
So it was indeed seen as quite 'newsworthy' by reputable journalists and heads of state.
It was interesting but not 'newsworthy' , or not at that point, anyway.
Infinitely less important and less 'newsworthy' stories were run instead.
Still, there was nothing 'newsworthy' in the event in itself until right at the end.
Why has the BBC seen fit to excise this small but noteworthy and 'newsworthy' detail from their version of the news?
Well, because a 'newsworthy' event without him in the news makes a politician shudder.
This is partly prejudice; but mostly, it's just that good news is considered less 'newsworthy' .
Of course, it would be much more 'newsworthy' if the headline were Dog Clones Man.
Observers noted that what made the event 'newsworthy' was not that the Fed made an error.
The point here is that the 'newsworthiness' of a given event often reflects journalists' expectations much more than it does the events significance.
A number of elements have been identified that contribute to the 'newsworthiness' of a story.
There is a solution that would be worth trying by those media organisations wanting a fresh approach to 'newsworthiness' and news gathering.
The severity of the crime is also the factor that comes closest to paralleling the traditional idea of 'newsworthiness' - the more severe the crime the more newsworthy the story.
The recollections of Mieth and others reveal that editorial decisions were not always motivated by traditional journalistic values such as 'newsworthiness' .
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