Електронний багатомовний

термінологічний словник

Electronic Multilingual Terminological Dictionary


Linguistics

Report, reporting

Report or reporting is the information, message, a story in periodicals, radio, and television broadcasts about important events of social life and artistic and literary reality, material from the scene of events.
Initially, the genre of reportage was represented by publications that informed the reader about the progress of court hearings, parliamentary debates, various meetings, etc. Later, these kinds of publications came to be called “reports.”
The term comes from the French “reportage,” which contains the Latin root “reporto,” which means to transmit. Reports are usually divided into television, newspaper, and radio reports and can also be published in magazines and online publications [Wikipedia].
Reporting is gathering facts or background material for a news story or feature. Reporters conduct interviews, research, and observation. A person who edits the report is called an editor. Editing is preparing a news report for publication, telecast, or broadcast. It is a process by which a report is read, corrected, modified, value-added, polished, improved, and improved [FlexiPrep].
The report is a spoken or written account of a particular event, typically presented in detail [The Free Dictionary].

Sources:

⠀ Report. Wikipedia. Retrieved from: https://uk.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%A0%D0%B5%D0%BF%D0%BE%D1%80%D1%82%D0%B0%D0%B6.

⠀ Reporting and Editing: Definition and Basic Facts About Reporting. . FlexiPrep. Retrieved from: https://www.flexiprep.com/NIOS-Notes/Senior-Secondary/Mass-Communication/NIOS-Class-12-Mass-Communication-Ch-7-Reporting-and-Editing-Part-1.html.

⠀ Reporting. The Free Dictionary. Retrieved from: https://www.thefreedictionary.com/reporting.

Part of speech Noun
Countable/uncountable countable
Type abstract
Gender neutral
Case nominative