[
US
/ˈnuzˌstænd/
]
[ UK /njˈuːzstænd/ ]
[ UK /njˈuːzstænd/ ]
NOUN
- a stall where newspapers and other periodicals are sold
How To Use newsstand In A Sentence
- Could the introduction of remote printing of distant newspapers resurrect the newsstand business?
- Eight new national newspapers have appeared on the newsstands since 1981.
- Nation, which some of your logier newsstands may still have. Before the Storm: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus
- However, the covers are generally woeful, neither standing out at first glance amidst a crowded newsstand, or providing any lasting meaning.
- E Monthly magazine, and added newsstand distribution starting with the April issue.
- The magazine finally hit the newsstands again after Soeharto relinquished his iron grip in 1998.
- Is she also suing every newsstand that carries US Weekly?
- It's hard cover and premium print quality will set it apart from other publications on the newsstand.
- With this stat, Maxim joins the elite ranks of Cosmo, Glamour and a handful of other titles that thrive at the newsstand.
- As usual, I've dilly-dallied on reading the latest New Yorker until it only has a few more days on the newsstands, but for any fellow Adam Gopnik fans, the July 4 issue is indispensable as usual, they don't put Gopnik's piece online—they know how to sell a magazine. Languagehat.com: DEATH OF A FISH.