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Definition of Joseph Pulitzer
1. Noun. United States newspaper publisher (born in Hungary) who established the Pulitzer prizes (1847-1911).
Lexicographical Neighbors of Joseph Pulitzer
Literary usage of Joseph Pulitzer
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Writing of Today: Models of Journalistic Prose by Gerhard Richard Lomer (1919)
"Joseph Pulitzer was born in the village of Mako, near Buda Pesth, in Hungary, on
April io, 1847. His father was a Jew, his mother a Christian. ..."
2. Masters of American Journalism by Julia Carson Stockett (1916)
"Joseph Pulitzer, 1847-1911 NEW YORK WORLD, 1883-1911 Encyclopaedias and other
... For United States senator from New York, Joseph Pulitzer [an intimate ..."
3. The American State Reports: Containing the Cases of General Value and by Abraham Clark Freeman (1898)
""Joseph Pulitzer, Esq. "My Dear Sir: I have to say to you by this letter that I
tak» the office of the Pulitzer Publishing 18 Company under the express ..."
4. Medical Record by George Frederick Shrady, Thomas Lathrop Stedman (1886)
"Mr. Joseph Pulitzer has given his first year's salary as Congressman, $5000, to
the New York Hospital, to found a free bed for the benefit of newspaper men. ..."
5. 130 Pen Pictures of Live Men by Orlando Oscar Stealey (1910)
"Joseph Pulitzer ;O GREAT a journalist is he that no ... in that profession, which
is full of jealousies, is jealous of Joseph Pulitzer. ..."