0 to push something firmly, often without causing it to move permanently further away from you: --
2 newspapers and magazines, and those parts of television and radio that broadcast news, or reporters and photographers who work for them: --
Freedom of the press (= the right of newspapers to publish news and opinions without being controlled by the government) must be upheld.
The charity invited the press (= reporters and photographers) to a presentation of its plans for the future.
press reporters/photographers
3 a business that prints and produces books and similar things: --
Cambridge University Press
Based on the epidemiological data of our study, there is a pressing need to implement control measures on this population.
Specifically, they pressed for high tariffs on select groups of goods and low or zero tariffs on raw materials, intermediate, and capital goods.
Large groups, perhaps corporate parties, find appropriate places for pressing flesh, or whatever it is that they do.
The intestine was then divided into ten equal sections, pressed in a trichine compressorium and cysticercoids counted under the microscope.
One is the arrival of keyboard microcomputers, the twentieth-century equivalent of the fifteenth-century printing presses...
In essence, beginners pressed for being included as the beneficiaries of this technology.
Care should be taken to support the elbow and humerus by simultaneously pressing them against the fetal chest.
Her comrades pressed her to go, but she was already distancing herself from them and decided to stay behind.