Who supports a political party in return for benefits or an intellectual who supports as a party’s candidate?

What is the right word for an intellectual (often a journalist) who is not a member of a political party but justifies the party’s causes to the general public and secretly takes benefit from them in return?

Can you please share the fact and definition of the word “Hello”?

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10 Answer(s)

A partisan, an adherent or supporter of a person, group, party, or cause, especially a person who shows a biased, emotional allegiance or support (e.g., police, public school officers, etc.) around a political group (Dictionary.) com) )

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Answered on March 18, 2021.
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What do you know about Hack & Hireling? According to R. L. Chapman and B.A. Kipfer, Dictionary of American Slang, Third Edition (1995): hack

8 n (also ) by 1810 A professional, usu freelance, writer who work to orderThis sense belongs to hack reflecting the notion that such a writer was for hire like a horse,… The Merriam-Webster’s

Eleventh Collegiate Dictionary (2003) offers this definition: hack

n. 3 a: a person who works solely for mercenary reasons : hireling When

for hireling, the Eleventh Collegiate says this: hireling n

: a person who serves for hire esp. (adv. mercenary) What is alternative option

for purely mercenary motives? Other options that might suit the situation are apologist, mouthpiece, mercenary and hired gun.

Answered on March 18, 2021.
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The phrase “other traveller” is “one who sympathizes with the aims or beliefs of an organization, but has never accepted them”. Technically, the phrase applies fairly well in the current context except that people are unlikely to automatically assume a fellow traveller is an intellectual or a journalist or secretly receives benefits.

So, depending on context, also consider nouns collaborator and quisling, and phrase tame journalist.

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The phrase “other traveller” is “one who sympathizes with the aims or beliefs of an organization, but has never accepted them”. Technically, the phrase applies fairly well in the current context except that people are unlikely to automatically assume a fellow traveller is an intellectual or a journalist or secretly receives benefits.

So, depending on context, also consider nouns collaborator and quisling, and phrase tame journalist.

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What do you know about Hack & Hireling? According to R. L. Chapman and B.A. Kipfer, Dictionary of American Slang, Third Edition (1995): hack

8 n (also ) by 1810 A professional, usu freelance, writer who work to orderThis sense belongs to hack reflecting the notion that such a writer was for hire like a horse,… The Merriam-Webster’s

Eleventh Collegiate Dictionary (2003) offers this definition: hack

n. 3 a: a person who works solely for mercenary reasons : hireling When

for hireling, the Eleventh Collegiate says this: hireling n

: a person who serves for hire esp. (adv. mercenary) What is alternative option

for purely mercenary motives? Other options that might suit the situation are apologist, mouthpiece, mercenary and hired gun.

Answered on March 18, 2021.
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A shill is a tout or promoter, with the connotation of figure who endorses a product or service on a supposedly independent basis, when in fact he or she is in the service of the person or organization benefiting from the endorsement.

Answered on March 18, 2021.
Add Comment

The phrase “other traveller” is “one who sympathizes with the aims or beliefs of an organization, but has never accepted them”. Technically, the phrase applies fairly well in the current context except that people are unlikely to automatically assume a fellow traveller is an intellectual or a journalist or secretly receives benefits.

So, depending on context, also consider nouns collaborator and quisling, and phrase tame journalist.

Add Comment

A shill is a tout or promoter, with the connotation of figure who endorses a product or service on a supposedly independent basis, when in fact he or she is in the service of the person or organization benefiting from the endorsement.

Answered on March 18, 2021.
Add Comment

A shill is a tout or promoter, with the connotation of figure who endorses a product or service on a supposedly independent basis, when in fact he or she is in the service of the person or organization benefiting from the endorsement.

Answered on March 18, 2021.
Add Comment

A shill is a tout or promoter, with the connotation of figure who endorses a product or service on a supposedly independent basis, when in fact he or she is in the service of the person or organization benefiting from the endorsement.

Answered on March 18, 2021.
Add Comment

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