Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at intelligencer.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Intelligencer.
Examples
-
The Seattle Press-Intelligencer is one of many U.S. (and international) newspapers feeling the reality of the financial crisis — which has exarcerbated a growing problem for newspapers: even in time of economic bliss, more and more readers are getting their news from Internet sources rather than from the printed page.
Religion news roundup: Scientology, religion trends, Islam, Gwen Shamblin, and more 2009
-
Meanwhile, Joel Connelly, the contumelious liberal columnist for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer is crying foul because the two highly qualified and judicially restrained challengers, Stephen Johnson and John Groen, are receiving campaign contributions from folks whom Connelly doesn't approve of: "Outside interests influencing court races".
Sound Politics: Chief Justice Alexander is "Very Well Qualified" to legislate from the bench 2006
-
Microsoft's home town paper, The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, is keeping up the drumbeat on the on-going saga over Microsoft and gay rights.
04/27/2005 2005
-
Post-Intelligencer is running a fictional column called From the desk of
USATODAY.com - ALCS notebook: Spike Lee a Yankees fan, too 2001
-
The Intelligencer was a very dry newspaper also -- very colorless to some degree.
Press Gallery 1991
-
The speech as reported in the Intelligencer is a very condensed and brief summary of my observations.
Documenting the American South: The Southern Experience in 19-th Century America 1844
-
They can also read the Intelligencer, which is a paper written by the people, with their hands guided.
-
I am not very young, I have neither wife nor children, nor a library, but, as I said, I read the Intelligencer, which is enough for me; it is to me a delightful paper, and so it was to my father.
-
"If you do, you will in all probability find me still poring over this old Intelligencer, which is full of rumors of approaching war with the British."
Hardscrabble; or, the fall of Chicago. a tale of Indian warfare John Richardson 1824
-
157 “I do hereby declare”: Anson Jones, proclamation, reprinted in National Intelligencer, June 26, 1845.
A Country of Vast Designs Robert W. Merry 2009
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.