Commentators can be categorized as a noun.
Noun |
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commentator - a writer who reports and analyzes events of the day | ||
commentator - an expert who observes and comments on something |
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1. | noun | In the world press, commentators predict that Katrina will make a profound change in the way the US is perceived at home and abroad, especially following the scenes of poverty and racial divisions they believe the disaster has revealed. | |
2. | noun | Commentators have variously described the sound of vuvuzelas as "annoying" and "satanic" and compared it with "a stampede of noisy elephants", "a deafening swarm of locusts", "a goat on the way to slaughter", "a giant hive full of very angry bees", and "a duck on speed". | |
3. | noun | Many commentators regard Obama as a centrist. | |
4. | noun | Some commentators regard Britain's departure from the European Union as a foregone conclusion. | |
5. | noun | "That was a terrible miss!" cried the commentators. | |
6. | noun | The prime minister and his party were by now so unpopular that most commentators predicted a landslide win for the opposition party to be in the offing for the next election. | |
7. | noun | John Motson is one of the most famous British commentators. | |
8. | noun | Some commentators have observed that we are living in a post-truth age. | |
9. | noun | But in return they get a clear look at important games, and if they miss something, they can always rely on the commentator's description or the instant replay. | |
10. | noun | Picasso was no clown. He was a sarcastic commentator on a confused age, a great archivist of humanity's foolishness. | |
11. | noun | The commentator began yelling when the referee gave the defender a second yellow card. | |
12. | noun | Yanni is an Algerian economic commentator. | |
13. | noun | But in return they get a clear look at important games, and if they miss something, they can always rely on the commentator's description or the instant replay. | |
14. | noun | Picasso was no clown. He was a sarcastic commentator on a confused age, a great archivist of humanity's foolishness. | |
15. | noun | The commentator began yelling when the referee gave the defender a second yellow card. |
Sentence | |
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noun | |
In the world press, commentators predict that Katrina will make a profound change in the way the US is perceived at home and abroad, especially following the scenes of poverty and racial divisions they believe the disaster has revealed. |
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Commentators have variously described the sound of vuvuzelas as "annoying" and "satanic" and compared it with "a stampede of noisy elephants", "a deafening swarm of locusts", "a goat on the way to slaughter", "a giant hive full of very angry bees", and "a duck on speed". | |
Many commentators regard Obama as a centrist. | |
Some commentators regard Britain's departure from the European Union as a foregone conclusion. | |
"That was a terrible miss!" cried the commentators. | |
The prime minister and his party were by now so unpopular that most commentators predicted a landslide win for the opposition party to be in the offing for the next election. | |
John Motson is one of the most famous British commentators. | |
Some commentators have observed that we are living in a post-truth age. | |
But in return they get a clear look at important games, and if they miss something, they can always rely on the commentator's description or the instant replay. | |
Picasso was no clown. He was a sarcastic commentator on a confused age, a great archivist of humanity's foolishness. | |
The commentator began yelling when the referee gave the defender a second yellow card. | |
Yanni is an Algerian economic commentator. | |
But in return they get a clear look at important games, and if they miss something, they can always rely on the commentator's description or the instant replay. | |
Picasso was no clown. He was a sarcastic commentator on a confused age, a great archivist of humanity's foolishness. | |
The commentator began yelling when the referee gave the defender a second yellow card. |