reportress
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]reportress (plural reportresses)
- Alternative form of reporteress
- 1857 July 30, The Charleston Mercury, volume XLIX, number 9989, Charleston, S.C., column 3:
- A Reportress going at large—Taking notes and dropping them—Something that was found on the road.
- 1866 February 24, The Weekly Free Press, volume 2, number 42, Atchison, Kan., column 7:
- Not Wanted—Any would-be editors, editresses, repor ers[sic], or reportresses, or genteel beggars or beggaresses of any kind or description.
- 2000 December 7, The Charlotte Observer, volume 131, number 342, Charlotte, N.C., page 7E, column 2:
- Flash: Our pal Tom Higgins caught this breathless news the other day from one of Charlotte’s talented TV reportresses: “A sure sign of winter is cold weather.” Yep, he reports, she is blonde.