From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary EnglishRelated topics: Newspapers, printing, publishingeditorialed‧i‧to‧ri‧al1 /ˌedəˈtɔːriəl◂/●くろまる○しろまる○しろまるAWL noun [countable]TCNa piece of writing in a newspaper that gives the editor’s opinion about something, rather than reporting factsExamples from the Corpuseditorial• It included scientific and clinicalarticles, abstracts from foreignjournals, newsitems and editorials.• Its editorial was almost certainly inspired by Sir Walter.• Some conference representatives may have been influenced by a fiercely polemical front pageeditorial in yesterday's DailyMail.• Piloteditorialsreflect the positions of the archdiocese and Cardinal Bernard Law on issues.• And the second editorial does Huckelberry no good.• Alas, the supes apparently failed to see that editorial, and voted to approve the changes.• That editorial reflected a realisticassessment of the dilemmacreated by any government-sanctioned attempt to regulatesalaries.• The editorials in the Straits Times were plaintive: How could the voters be so ungrateful?• Their editorials always criticize the government, whatever it does.editorialed‧i‧to‧ri‧al2AWL adjective1relating to the preparation of a newspaper, book, televisionprogramme etc for printing or broadcastingan editorial assistant2[usually before noun]expressing the opinion of a particular newspaper editor rather than just giving factsthe paper’s editorial column —editorially adverbThe paper is editorially independent.Examples from the Corpuseditorial• Sharon is an editorialassistant in the sports department.• I don't give a darn if the results don't coincide with the editorial board's political biases!• editorialcomments• The readability of the review itself is the paramounteditorialconsideration.• Designers use the girls because they ensureeditorialcoverage.• But the editorialmethod which is applied to the data has much to display that is well-spoken.• the editorial pages in the newspaper• Joel Nilsson is an editorialwriter for the Arizona Republic.