Explore Broadcasting Topic
- airtime
- antenna
- atmospherics
- audio
- band
- BBC, the
- beacon
- Beeb, the
- boom box
- British Broadcasting Corporation
- broadband
- broadcasting
- cable television
- CB
- CCTV
- Ceefax
- channel
- closed circuit television
- communications satellite
- contrast
- DJ
- exposure
- FM
- frequency
- ham
- Hz
- interference
- kHz
- kilohertz
- linkup
- live
- local radio
- long wave
- loudspeaker
- LW
- mast
- medium wave
- megahertz
- MHz
- modulate
- monitor
- NBC
- on-air
- presenter
- programming
- quadraphonic
- receive
- receiver
- reception
- roger
- satellite
- satellite dish
- satellite television
- saturation
- scrambler
- series
- shipping forecast
- ship-to-shore
- short wave
- signal
- signature tune
- simulcast
- SOS
- sound bite
- sound check
- static
- telecast
- Teletext
- televise
- television
- television licence
- telly
- time signal
- transistor
- transistor radio
- transmission
- transmit
- transmitter
- tuner
- tweeter
- two-way
- UHF
- unscramble
- veejay
- video jockey
- volume
- waveband
- wavelength
- white noise
- wireless
From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishbroadcastingbroad‧cast‧ing /ˈbrɔːdkɑːstɪŋ $ ˈbrɒːdkæstɪŋ/ noun [uncountable] AMTthe business of making television and radio programmes a career in broadcasting
Examples from the Corpus
broadcasting• Current broadcasting rules would ban the choice prize a takeover of Granada, the suitor Tyne Tees spurned last year.• We began by asking her how she came to be in broadcasting.• The extent to which educational skills are needed in broadcasting can none the less be exaggerated.• The only clear case where this strategy succeeded was when Thatcher introduced the SinnFéin broadcasting ban.• Gaullist control of broadcasting did not lessen.• Much time and energy in the early 1970S was spent on distinctions between state and public service broadcasting.• Section 2 deals with the concept of public service broadcasting.• Principle, as well as expediency, therefore ensured that public service broadcasting was to be impartial.