From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishjournojour‧no /ˈdʒɜːnəʊ $ ˈdʒɜːrnoʊ/ noun (plural journos) [countable] British English informalTCNBO a journalist
Examples from the Corpus
journo• On arrival, the dedicated journos had proceeded to interview everyone, buying drinks and slipping tenners about pretty liberally.• What the saloon bar lacked in creature comforts it made up for by the complete absence of journos.• I can not remember us jabber of journos enjoying a joke more.• Trouble is, the prof is a very private individual who doesn't suffer journos gladly - if at all!• That gave the journos their opportunity to hound De Gaulle without restraint.• Oh, we are quite thick-skinned, the journos chorused.• Dempster represents the biter-bit brigade, being a fairly constant topic whenever journos gather together.