Magazine
in sentence
536 examples of Magazine in a sentence
In an article in the
magazine
Redbook titled "You: PMS Free," readers were informed that between 80 to 90 percent of women suffer from PMS. L.A. Muscle
magazine
warned its readers that 40 to 50 percent of women suffer from PMS, and that it plays a major role in women's mental and physical health, and a couple of years ago, even the Wall Street Journal ran an article on calcium as a treatment for PMS, asking its female readers, "Do you turn into a witch every month?"
Remember, just a few years earlier, news was consumed from just three places: reading a newspaper or magazine, listening to the radio or watching television.
This is one of the cameras of Rosetta, the OSIRIS camera, and this actually was the cover of Science
magazine
on January 23 of this year.
RM: That's Whet Moser from Chicago
magazine.
There's the centerfold from National Geographic
magazine
with one of her caregivers, and she roams the web and has hundreds of hours of Bina's mannerisms, personalities.
Later, I used that data in a
magazine
article and later in my book, and on appearances on places like CBS and NPR, they were offered that opportunity again to say, "Trevor Aaronson's findings are wrong."
It'd change modern medicine so much so, that decades later, Time
magazine
would call him pain relief's founding father.
So he was this skinny little urban guy and GQ
magazine
would send him down the Colorado River whitewater rafting to see if he would survive.
Stacey Baker: In the years since, Alec and I have done a number of
magazine
projects together, and we've become friends.
So, I had one learning community in high school, then I went to another for college, and then I went to another, when I started working at a
magazine
called "Booklist," where I was an assistant, surrounded by astonishingly well-read people.
And up here, you have the ISIS magazine, printed in English and published to recruit.
I got fired because, well, the Vietnam War was on, and the boss of bosses in my organization was a big fan of the war and wrote a New York Times article, a
magazine
section cover story, about how we would win in Vietnam.
But then, I was 29 years old at this time, and some kid came around and said he was a stringer from Newsweek
magazine
and he wanted to interview me and ask what I was doing about my views.
Now, of these four fascinating findings, which one do you think Men's Health
magazine
put on its cover?
But I think it shows something important, that when Men's Health
magazine
put it on their cover, they also called, you'll love this, "Choreplay."
In 1915, on the eve of one of the great suffrage demonstrations down Fifth Avenue in New York City, a writer in New York wrote an article in a magazine, and the title of the article was, "Feminism for Men."
So right there is the tutoring center, and then behind the curtain were the McSweeney's offices, where all of us would be working on the
magazine
and book editing and things like that.
And this is Amy Ng, a
magazine
editor turned illustrator, entrepreneur, teacher and creative director.
Fast Company
magazine
identified adaptability as the single most important skill to develop in order to thrive in the 21st century.
"That's Beijing" is similar to "Time Out," a
magazine
that broadcasts what is happening in town during the week, and suddenly you see the building portrayed no longer as physical matter, but actually as an urban actor, as part of a series of personas that define the life of the city.
This was from Nature
magazine.
Just to clarify: copy editors don't choose what goes into the
magazine.
Here, another reader quotes a passage from the magazine: [Ruby was seventy-six, but she retained her authoritative bearing; only her unsteady gait belied her age.]
Then there's this: "Love you, love your magazine, but can you please stop writing massive numbers as text?" [two and a half million ...] No. (Laughter) One last cri de coeur from a spelling stickler: ["Those long stringy things are vocal cords, not chords."]
Recently, he wrote a story for "Talk of the Town," that's the section at the front of the
magazine
with short pieces on subjects ranging from Ricky Jay's exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum to the introduction of doggie bags in France.
I'd never seen it used as a verb with this spelling, and I was distraught to think that "mic'ed" would get into the
magazine
on my watch.
One of the times in Gaza, during the kidnapping of the British journalist Alan Johnston, I was asked by an American
magazine
to set up a meeting with the kidnappers in Gaza, and I did.
Actually, in 2002, this was the cover of "Time" magazine, where we were actually honoring three brave whistle-blowers for their decision to come forward in the name of the truth.
What's amazing about this project is that it was the first funded by National Geographic, and it graced the front cover of its
magazine
in 1912.
In one famous example from decades ago, the management of Vanity Fair
magazine
actually circulated a memo entitled: "Forbidding Discussion Among Employees of Salary Received."
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