Last modified on 2 April 2015, at 12:00

Journal

This article is about the journal as a written medium. For other uses, see Journal (disambiguation).

A journal (through French from Latin diurnalis, daily) has several related meanings:

  • a daily record of events or business; a private journal is usually referred to as a diary
  • a newspaper or other periodical, in the literal sense of one published each day
  • many publications issued at stated intervals, such as academic journals, or the record of the transactions of a society, are often called journals.[1] In academic use, a journal refers to a serious, scholarly publication that is peer-reviewed. A non-scholarly magazine written for an educated audience about an industry or an area of professional activity is usually called a trade magazine.[2]

The word "journalist", for one whose business is writing for the public press and nowadays also other media, has been in use since the end of the 17th century.

Public journalEdit

Main article: Public journal

A public journal is a record of day-by-day events in a parliament or congress. It is also called minutes or records.

Business and accountingEdit

The term "journal" is also used in business:

  • A journal is a book or computer file in which monetary transactions are entered the first time they are processed. This journal lists transactions in chronological sequence by date prior to a transfer of the same transactions to a ledger in the process of bookkeeping
  • Narrations or equivalent to a ship's log, as a record of the daily run, such as observations, weather changes, or other events of daily importance

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

  1. ^ Gary Blake and Robert W. Bly, The Elements of Technical Writing, pg. 113. New York: Macmillan Publishers, 1993. ISBN 0020130856
  2. ^ Gillian Page, Robert Campbell, Arthur Jack Meadows (1997). Journal Publishing. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-44137-4.