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[ US /ˈmæɡəˌzin/ ]
[ UK /mˌæɡɐzˈiːn/ ]
NOUN
  1. a business firm that publishes magazines
    he works for a magazine
  2. a periodic publication containing pictures and stories and articles of interest to those who purchase it or subscribe to it
    it takes several years before a magazine starts to break even or make money
  3. a light-tight supply chamber holding the film and supplying it for exposure as required
  4. a metal frame or container holding cartridges; can be inserted into an automatic gun
  5. product consisting of a paperback periodic publication as a physical object
    tripped over a pile of magazines
  6. a storehouse (as a compartment on a warship) where weapons and ammunition are stored

How To Use magazine In A Sentence

  • She was a slim blonde girl in her twenties who might have stepped out of a fashion advertisement in a women's magazine.
  • But the consumer magazine also noted that people rated the no-frills carriers slightly worse than two years ago.
  • The magazine gave voice to hundreds of oppressed factory workers.
  • As the author repeatedly points out, the pornographic material he seized wasn't simply more explicit than 18-certificate films or top-shelf magazines.
  • Years of early art, pencil sketches, architectural renderings, magazine covers, newspaper clippings and personal photographs are also on display in the new gallery.
  • a persistent campaign of mockery by the satirical fortnightly magazine
  • Here's what the magazine reproduces from his award citation.
  • He writes for some trendy magazine for the under-30s.
  • Magazines need the revenue from this powerful, high-spending label. Times, Sunday Times
  • For now, it's a relief to see that she is not included in Forbes magazine's recent list of the world's 100 most powerful women.
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