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commentariat
/ ˌɒəˈɛəɪæ /
noun
the journalists and broadcasters who analyse and comment on current affairs
Word History and Origins
Origin of commentariat1
Example Sentences
In December, paparazzi captured her in a bikini, and the online commentariat did what it always does: spun a woman’s changing body into a morality play.
They should not fall into the narrative trap, pushed by a certain subset of the center-left commentariat for months now, that the way forward with young voters is to move right on issue after issue.
Contrary to what hope-peddlers and happy-pill sellers in the news media and commentariat would like the American people to believe, Trump is never going to stop.
Surprisingly, the commentariat has seldom acknowledged, let alone analyzed, the neurosis of showy patriotism concealing hidden hostility to one’s country, despite a popular film, “The Manchurian Candidate,” that described its essentials more than 60 years ago.
His statement that transgender girls and women participating in female sports leagues is “deeply unfair” produced screaming headlines — this from a longtime champion of LGBTQ+ rights, no less — and acres of analyses from the political commentariat and those inhabiting social media.
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