137 adjectives to describe correspondents

If my entry into journalism was accidental, working with rural correspondents in Goa was equally unexpected.

The practice upset all his ideas of a foreign correspondent's duties, which should be to obtain first-hand and not second-hand information.

I only meant to do like the girl in the bookhave a thrilling unknown correspondent.

The moment the Play ends, Mrs. Oldfield is no more Andromache, but Mrs. Oldfield; and tho the Poet had left Andromache stone-dead upon the Stage, as your ingenious Correspondent phrases it, Mrs. Oldfield might still have spoke a merry Epilogue.

I was told to see Baron von Mumm Schwartzenstein, who was officially designated by Von Jagow to handle neutral correspondents, and who, unofficially, I have reason to believe, is connected with the Secret Service.

How had Scotland Yard's anonymous correspondent learned about the murder, and what were his motives in informing the police in the way he had done?

They were from persons of both sexes, and of various ages, and in the end from occasional correspondents in nearly every civilised country.

For the originals of the annexed engravings we are indebted to the sketchbooks of two esteemed correspondents.

DISTANT CORRESPONDENTS IN A LETTER TO B.F. ESQ.

"Yes, he is a very punctual correspondent; I hear every other day.

Beyond doubt, this correspondent, despite his busy schedule in Vasco, has been one of my most enterprising correspondents and a crucial component in my network of correspondents.

"I hope you are kind to your faithful correspondent," smiled Mr. Lorimer, still holding the letter between his finger and thumb.

An intelligent correspondent suggests that brandy would be about the thing, but that it should be labelled "Bay Bum."

for a youth between the ages of seventeen and nineteen to play the juggler at keeping three, or even half-a-dozen, female correspondents going at once, each of whom sleeps nightly with copious documentary evidence of her sole and incontrovertible possession of the sacred heart.

Can any of your valuable correspondents give me the origin or derivation of the word Snob?

Ethan Allen himself had buried the hatchet and, like his brother, become Carleton's friendly correspondent.

Mr. Southey was an indefatigable and elaborate correspondent, and, as his letters have already been published, it is not necessary to quote them.

It would have been impossible for Mr. ADDISON (who made little or no use of letters sent in, by the numerous correspondents of the Spectator) to have executed his large share of his task in so exquisite a manner; if he had not engrafted into it many Pieces that had lain by him, in little hints and minutes, which he from time to time collected and ranged in order, and moulded into the form in which they now appear.

I trust that from the obliging communications of some of your valuable literary correspondents, I may be so fortunate as to meet with the object of my query.

Between Lord Holland and Sydney Smith the most cordial friendship existed; and the eccentric and fascinating Lady Holland was his constant correspondent.

He was wont to address his father's memory with a sobriety that lent to the fact of his illegitimacy a portentous air of seriousness, and he made no secret of the fact that he was the friend and the confidential correspondent of the present Earl of Clandennie.

I can by no means allow your melancholy Correspondent, that the new Epilogue is unnatural because it is gay.

We resolved to pursue it into the country to the northward, from whence the Germans were reported to be advancing, crushing back the outnumbered Belgians as they came onward; but when we tried to secure a laissez passer at the gendarmerie, where until then an accredited correspondent might get himself a laissez passer, we bumped into obstacles.

The only Reason your mournful Correspondent gives against this Facetious Epilogue, as he calls it, is, that he has mind to go home melancholy.

The poem is divided into twenty-four cantos or sections, written as "Letters" to an imaginary correspondent who had bidden the writer "describe the borough," each dealing with its separate topicprofessions, trades, sects in religion, inns, strolling players, almshouse inhabitants, and so forth.

137 adjectives to describe  correspondents