Columnist

/ˈkɑləmnɪst/ noun

Definition

a writer who regularly contributes a column to a newspaper or magazine

Etymology

from column + -ist, column from Latin columna meaning pillar

Kelly Says

Columnists are named after the physical columns of text in newspapers - they literally write the 'pillars' that support the publication's content!

Translations

ARالعربية
كOLUMNست
koh-LOHM-nist
DEDeutsch
Kolumnist
koh-LOHM-nist
ESEspañol
columnista
koh-loo-mee-STAH
FRFrançais
chroniqueur
shroh-nee-KEHR
HIहिन्दी
स्तंभकार
stambhakaar
IDBahasa Indonesia
penulis kolom
peh-NOO-lis koh-lohm
ITItaliano
columnista
koh-loo-mee-STAH
NLNederlands
columnist
koh-LOHM-nist
PLPolski
felietonista
feh-lee-eh-TOH-nee-stah
PTPortuguês
colunista
koh-loo-NEE-stah
RUРусский
колумнист
koh-LOHM-nist
THไทย
นักเขียนคอลัมน์
nahk khee-yan koh-lahm
TRTürkçe
sütun yazarı
soo-toon yah-zah-ree
VITiếng Việt
nhà báo
ngah bah-oh

Ethical Language Guidance

Gender History

Journalism professionalized in the 19th-20th centuries with male dominance. 'Columnist' itself is gender-neutral, but the historical role was male-coded; women were often relegated to 'society columns' or 'women's pages' rather than opinion/politics.

Inclusive Usage

Use 'columnist' freely—it's neutral. Specify beat/subject when possible to avoid assuming expertise distribution by gender.

Empowerment Note

Women columnists like Dorothy Thompson, Ann Landers, and Molly Ivins pioneered opinion journalism and broke into hard news/politics columns despite institutional barriers.

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