chequebook journalism

英 [ˌtʃekbʊk ˈdʒɜːnəlɪzəm] 美 [ˌtʃekbʊk ˈdʒɜːrnəlɪzəm]

n.  支票新闻(记者花大价钱获得个人隐私情况在报纸上报道)



牛津词典

noun

  1. 支票新闻(记者花大价钱获得个人隐私情况在报纸上报道)
    the practice of journalists paying people large amounts of money to give them personal or private information for a newspaper story

    柯林斯词典

      in AM, use 美国英语用 checkbook journalism

    1. 重金新闻,支票新闻(花大笔钱购买有关犯罪或名人隐私的信息为报纸文章提供素材)
      Chequebook journalism is the practice of paying people large sums of money for information about crimes or famous people in order to get material for newspaper articles.

      双语例句

      1. As the tabloid have hit on hard times, the cheque of chequebook journalism have shrink. For a long put, equal to the put value minus the premium. For a short put, equal to the premium minus the put value.
        随著小报纸的不景气,买断独家采访权的金额也跟著缩减了。对于买入看跌期权的人,等于期权价值减去期权金。对于卖出看跌期权的人,等于期权金减去价值。