Find the word magazine

mag·a·zine

 (măg′ə-zēn′, măg′ə-zēn′)

n.

1. A periodical containing a collection of articles, stories, pictures, or other features.

2. A television program that presents a variety of topics, usually on current events, in a format that often includes interviews and commentary.

3.

a. A place where goods are stored, especially a building in a fort or a storeroom on a warship where ammunition is kept.

b. The contents of a storehouse, especially a stock of ammunition.

4.

a. A compartment in some types of firearms, often a small detachable box, in which cartridges are held to be fed into the firing chamber.

b. A compartment in a camera in which rolls or cartridges of film are held for feeding through the exposure mechanism.

c. Any of various compartments attached to machines, used for storing or supplying necessary material.

adj.

Of or relating to periodicals: a magazine story.


[French magasin, storehouse, from Old French magazin (possibly via Old Italian magazzino), from Arabic maḫāzin, pl. of maḫzan, from ḫazana, to store, from Aramaic ḥassen, to possess, hoard, derived stem of ḥəsan, to be strong; see ḫsn in Semitic roots.]

American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

magazine

(ˌmæɡəˈziːn)

n

1. (Journalism & Publishing) a periodical paperback publication containing articles, fiction, photographs, etc

2. (Firearms, Gunnery, Ordnance & Artillery) a metal box or drum holding several cartridges used in some kinds of automatic firearms; it is removed and replaced when empty

3. (Military) a building or compartment for storing weapons, explosives, military provisions, etc

4. (Firearms, Gunnery, Ordnance & Artillery) a stock of ammunition

5. (Mechanical Engineering) a device for continuously recharging a handling system, stove, or boiler with solid fuel

6. (Photography) photog another name for cartridge5

7. a rack for automatically feeding a number of slides through a projector

8. (Broadcasting) a TV or radio programme made up of a series of short nonfiction items

[C16: via French magasin from Italian magazzino, from Arabic makhāzin, plural of makhzan storehouse, from khazana to store away]

Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

mag•a•zine

(ˌmæg əˈzin, ˈmæg əˌzin)

n.

1. a periodical publication, usu. paperbound, that typically contains essays, stories, poems, and often illustrations.

2. a television program that combines interviews, commentary, and entertainment.

3. a room for keeping gunpowder and other explosives.

4. a military depot for arms or provisions.

6. a receptacle on a gun for holding cartridges.

[1575–85; < French magasin < Italian magazzino storehouse < Arabic makhāzin, pl. of makhzan storehouse; in E figuratively, as “storehouse of information,” used in book and periodical titles]

Random House Kernerman Webster’s College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.

magazine

— Considered a «storehouse» for articles; the word comes from Arabic makhzan, «storehouse,» and was first used in book titles presenting a «store» of information about specific topics.

Farlex Trivia Dictionary. © 2012 Farlex, Inc. All rights reserved.

Magazine

 a place where goods are stored; a warehouse or depot, 1583; a building in which arms, ammunition, or provision for an army are kept for use in time of war, 1596; in modern times it is a periodical publication which contains a wide range of articles, pictures, and advertisements, aimed at a class, age group, or other category of readers interested in a specific subject or place.

Examples: magazine of arms, 1810; of bliss, 1599; of chaises, 1786; of coal, 1771; of darts and arrow, 1781; of flesh, milk, butter, and cheese, 1719; of knowledge, 1836; of law, 1760; of learning, 1610; of malice, 1750; of nourishment, 1615; of petitions, 1817; of powder (gunpowder), 1613; of power, 1836; of provisions, 1589; of sin, 1709; of topics, 1795; of good words, 1638; cloudy magazine of storms, 1644.

Dictionary of Collective Nouns and Group Terms. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.

magazine

shop

1. ‘magazine’

A magazine is a collection of articles, photographs, and advertisements published every week or every month.

Her face was on the cover of every magazine.

Tanya read a magazine while she waited.

2. ‘shop’

Don’t use ‘magazine’ to refer to a building or part of a building where things are sold. The word you use is shop or store.

There is a row of shops on the High Street.

Collins COBUILD English Usage © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 2004, 2011, 2012

Translations

časopiszásobníkčasopiseckýprachárna

magasintidsskriftsprængstoflagerbladblad-

magasin

aikakauslehtilipasmakasiinipatruunalipas

časopisspremnik

magazintölténytártárfolyóiratlõszerraktár

skotfærageymslaskothylki, magasíntímarit

弾薬雑誌

잡지탄창

dėtuvėmagazinasšaudmenų sandėlissprogmenųžurnalas

žurnālsmagazīnas kārba, aptverenoliktava

revistă

časopiseckýpracháreňzásobník

revija

magasintidskrift

jarida

ที่ใส่กระสุนนิตยสาร

ổ đạntạp chí

Collins Spanish Dictionary — Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005

magazine

[ˌmægəˈziːn]

modif [advert, article, cover, editor] → de magazine; [interview] → dans un magazinemagazine rack nporte-revues m inv

Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

magazine

Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007

Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995

magazine

(mӕgəˈziːn) , ((American) ˈmӕgəzi:n) noun

1. (abbreviation mag (mӕg) ) a publication issued regularly containing articles, stories etc by various writers. women’s magazines; (also adjective) a magazine article.

2. a compartment in or on a gun that holds cartridges.

3. a storeroom for ammunition, explosives etc.

Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd.

magazine

ذَخِيرَةٌ حَرْبِيَّة, مَجَلَّةٌ časopis, zásobník magasin Munitionslager, Zeitschrift γεμιστήρας, περιοδικό cargador, revista aikakauslehti, patruunalipas magasin, magazine časopis, spremnik caricatore, rivista 弾薬, 雑誌 잡지, 탄창 magazijn, tijdschrift magasin, tidsskrift magazyn, magazynek câmara, revista журнал, магазин magasin, tidskrift ที่ใส่กระสุน, นิตยสาร dergi, Şarjör ổ đạn, tạp chí 弹药, 杂志

Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009

  • Where can I buy a magazine?

Collins Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009

Other forms: magazines

A magazine is a printed publication that comes out regularly and includes photographs and articles. Before cell phones became popular, people used to read magazines in doctors’ waiting rooms.

Magazines were once only printed on paper, but today there are also online magazines. These electronic versions are similar to traditional magazines in that they publish periodically and include stories, illustrations or photos, and usually advertisements. The original definition of magazine was a space for ammunition storage, either in a building or ship, or attached to a weapon. The very first printed magazine was called «Gentleman’s Magazine,» from the idea that it was a «storehouse» of knowledge.

Definitions of magazine

  1. noun

    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”

    synonyms:

    mag

  2. noun

    product consisting of a paperback periodic publication as a physical object

    “tripped over a pile of
    magazines

  3. noun

    a business firm that publishes magazines

    “he works for a
    magazine

    synonyms:

    magazine publisher

  4. noun

    a storehouse (as a compartment on a warship) where weapons and ammunition are stored

  5. noun

    a metal frame or container holding cartridges; can be inserted into an automatic gun

  6. noun

    a light-tight supply chamber holding the film and supplying it for exposure as required

DISCLAIMER: These example sentences appear in various news sources and books to reflect the usage of the word ‘magazine’.
Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Vocabulary.com or its editors.
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noun

COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES

a book/magazine cover

▪ There was a blonde girl on the magazine cover.

a fashion magazine

▪ She’s the editor of a leading fashion magazine.

a magazine article

▪ The couple talked frankly about their joy at having a new baby in a magazine article published yesterday.

a newspaper/magazine advertisement

▪ I got the apartment through a newspaper advertisement.

an article appears in a newspaper/magazine

▪ A couple of articles appeared in local papers, but nothing else.

COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS

■ ADJECTIVE

glossy

▪ She was twenty-eight years of age with the kind of breathtaking allure normally associated with the cover of a glossy fashion magazine.

▪ I have simply refined the role of glossy magazines.

▪ Her designer clothes were from the pages of a glossy fashion magazine.

▪ We take it back about the glossy business magazines.

▪ Yes, the glossy magazines should avoid using images of clearly under-nourished models or promoting the heroin-chic look.

▪ You may obtain snapshots using scissors and your favorite glossy magazine.

▪ The newspaper slowly unfolded itself on the mat, flopping open to reveal some glossy law magazine that had been placed inside.

▪ It can be seen smiling from the cover of glossy magazines that celebrate celebrity as much as sport.

monthly

▪ A new monthly magazine Wessex Architect was launched and used to promote a wide range of events.

▪ E Monthly magazine, and added newsstand distribution starting with the April issue.

▪ Which was the most discussed book of the year according to some magazine, monthly magazine.

▪ It is now the largest selling monthly magazine for young women in almost all of the countries in which it is published.

▪ Automatic receipt of the monthly magazine Banking World.

▪ Do they have time for a monthly general-interest magazine?

▪ As a monthly, the magazine can not offer its readers the overnight scores, nor preview the week’s to matches.

▪ The disc also contains a monthly magazine of field and classroom ideas.

national

▪ She has also appeared in several national magazines due to her prowess at sewing a fine seam.

▪ But she realized she needed at least $ 5 million to launch a high-quality national magazine.

▪ As a first step, it is requesting permission to publish a national magazine which would be distributed by the State.

▪ Her smiling face graced the cover of a national magazine.

▪ While still at school Widgery had written for a short-lived national schools magazine, which rapidly collapsed.

▪ The impromptu concerts have been written up in national magazines and people travel hundreds of miles to take part in the fun.

▪ By 1986 he had reverted to freelancing on several national newspapers and magazines before joining the newly launched Independent as rock critic.

▪ I picked up the National Geographic magazine and stared at a-series of time-lapse photographs of a blowhole in Yosemite.

new

▪ The new post-Occupation magazines and publishing houses were run from bars.

▪ A new monthly magazine Wessex Architect was launched and used to promote a wide range of events.

▪ McHugh is the editor of Maxim, a new magazine for men who love beer, babes and sports.

▪ With it came not only new though ephemeral music, but new clothes, magazines, books and films.

▪ The editor of a new national magazine called me up before Christmas and asked me to write a story about suburban sprawl.

▪ Backing the talent of the Adamsons with this new magazine could be a vital way of influencing public opinion.

▪ The new year already has brought a flurry of new magazines.

popular

▪ Even popular magazine articles recognize that there are appropriate steps necessary to being happy.

▪ Like the popular magazine, the tone of the tax guide is straight forward and conversational.

▪ The editors of these popular magazines are not feminist ideologues, but they have bought into the victim culture.

▪ The extent to which certain species of marine fishes may be tamed was published some time ago in a popular weekly magazine.

▪ Now, popular magazines regularly broach the subject.

▪ Naturalists recruited boys to hunt specimens, established price lists, advertised in popular magazines.

weekly

▪ If you are unaware, Sports Illustrated is the United States’ leading weekly sports magazine, with over 3.25 million subscribers.

▪ The extent to which certain species of marine fishes may be tamed was published some time ago in a popular weekly magazine.

▪ In 1949 he joined Paris-Match, which was then a new weekly news magazine.

▪ Ferdinand Mount, then the Political Editor of the weekly magazine Spectator, replaced him.

▪ Even weekly magazines carry styles to match developments in the law.

▪ A brand new weekly women’s magazine, Woman’s Day, is launched.

▪ She was about to leave Options and start a new weekly magazine called Riva.

■ NOUN

article

▪ Each magazine article I read advised me to buy the best, the fastest, the latest or whatever.

▪ A recent Governing magazine article about at-risk youth illustrated the importance of a holistic approach.

▪ Best-selling books, magazine articles and newspaper columns publicised his ideas.

▪ A magazine article indicated I might benefit from adding weight lifting to my exercise program.

▪ Denise and Ralph Bulger talk frankly about the joy they feel over the new baby in a magazine article published tomorrow.

▪ Newspaper and magazine articles create an interest in the artist.

▪ He found two lists of boards of directors, apparently copied from a magazine article.

computer

▪ They seized computer magazines, phones, cables and diskettes, but failed to find a computer or a modem.

▪ The past couple of years have witnessed an explosion in the number of neural network articles appearing in computer magazines.

▪ As for Ziff-Davis, the market for computer magazines is already competitive and growing more so.

▪ Buy some computer magazines — you will find that many companies sell direct, not through dealers.

▪ Most computer magazines publish short games programs.

▪ Desktop Publishing Hardly an issue of a computer magazine goes by without some mention, editorial or advertisement, of desktop publishing.

▪ A few computer magazines, some cash I pinched from Quigley’s drawer and my Abbey National card.

editor

▪ But so cool is the blue minimalist card that one style magazine editor aspired to name his baby son Sony.

▪ The magazine editor offered me his moist, soft hand; then I was left alone at the table with my brother.

▪ That night we went to a party given by a magazine editor.

fashion

▪ She was twenty-eight years of age with the kind of breathtaking allure normally associated with the cover of a glossy fashion magazine.

▪ I would cut out the people in the fashion magazines and use them as though I was creating a play.

▪ She looked as if she could be on the cover of a fashion magazine.

▪ Her designer clothes were from the pages of a glossy fashion magazine.

▪ She wasn’t a girl at all, in any sense that the fashion magazines would recognize.

▪ It specialises in giving everyday people a glamorous look that would do the cover of any top fashion magazine proud.

▪ I look at fashion magazines more than I look at news magazines.

▪ Andrew Logan’s party, for instance, which got us our first press — a mention in an upmarket society fashion magazine.

life

▪ He quickly married Toni Nichols, a blond and beautiful Life magazine photographer.

▪ Before that he was with Life magazine.

▪ Paris Match and Life magazines had both bought some.

news

▪ Regional daily news magazine: Central News West.

▪ The news magazine was dead on.

▪ In 1949 he joined Paris-Match, which was then a new weekly news magazine.

▪ At about this time I read the first article about us in a worn copy of a news magazine being passed around.

▪ The supreme court’s rulings have been controversial, much criticised in academic journals, newspaper leaders and news magazines.

▪ The Advocate, based in Los Angeles, is a biweekly news magazine covering stories of particular interest to homosexuals.

▪ It announced its existence in a group interview with the news magazine Semana.

▪ One will be devoted to the Internet, the other is designed as a news magazine about technology of the future.

publisher

▪ Technical standards unite this cottage industry of desk-top publishing with the presses of newspaper and magazine publishers.

▪ The magazine publisher had always hoped that supply-side guru Jack Kemp would head the Republican ticket.

▪ The magazine publisher will formally announce his withdrawal in Washington Thursday.

time

▪ I now work for Time magazine, they cover world politics and I cover the international end for them.

▪ At Berkeley, he began stringing for Time magazine, which hired him after he graduated.

▪ By then, Time magazine had published a profile of me.

▪ When time magazine made her the subject of a cover story, she encouraged them to include a profile of me.

▪ Only now has the story dribbled out, making the cover of Time magazine this week.

▪ Well, Time magazine seems to think so.

▪ Suppose the photographers from Time magazine got a shot of me.

trade

▪ On a low table in front of her were some engineering trade magazines and a copy of the Financial Times.

▪ His interest in the business grew after reading trade magazines and other material about the business.

▪ He had said he would give up freelancing and get a regular job on a trade magazine or something.

▪ Publisher, a journalism trade magazine, and a series of press releases.

▪ Emap’s portfolio also includes Automotive Management, the leading trade magazine in the franchised dealer sector.

▪ Take Mary Pittilla, 26, an Oxford graduate who earns £17,000 a year as a sub-editor on a London trade magazine.

■ VERB

appear

▪ It is intended that these articles should be in addition to current missionary writing which appears in the magazine each month.

▪ They were the first women to appear in magazines who looked strong enough to swing a tennis racket.

▪ Throughout the summer adverts will appear in newspapers and magazines reminding people of the goodness of spam.

▪ She has also appeared in several national magazines due to her prowess at sewing a fine seam.

▪ This satire originally appeared in the on-line magazine Salon.

▪ The correct answer will appear in the summer magazine.

▪ Articles appeared in major magazines and metropolitan dailies.

buy

▪ I buy your magazine every month and sometimes I don’t receive it and have to wait till the month after.

▪ The sales pitch can be so slick that many consumers don’t even realize they have bought magazines until the bill arrives.

▪ He bought a magazine and flipped its pages while he drank the coffee.

▪ I used to buy architecture magazines on the street.

▪ It just got too obvious that nobody bought the magazine so Moscow hauled in the chain.

▪ Conde Nast is expected to start or buy another five magazines in the next five years, Mr Florio says.

▪ I bought the magazine, Shannonside, and found it to be very interesting.

▪ Few men who pick up Playboy can get away with the line that they buy the magazine only for the articles.

publish

▪ If the story is accepted and published in a magazine then it has already gone through a considerable review process.

▪ The findings on why cancers don’t stop growing will be published in the science magazine Nature this week.

▪ I knew that in the history of literature a great many writers had begun their careers by publishing in such little magazines.

▪ As a first step, it is requesting permission to publish a national magazine which would be distributed by the State.

▪ Our group publishes a quarterly magazine, giving help, advice and the latest news on access, etc.

read

▪ Her partner reads the magazine, too, and sometimes she lends a copy to a friend.

▪ I used to send my songs off to outfits in Hollywood that I had read about in magazines.

▪ Rafiq was over by the window, reading a technical magazine.

▪ His interest in the business grew after reading trade magazines and other material about the business.

▪ Lanskoi and Rostovtsev read the magazine avidly.

▪ He follows the auctions and reads the auction magazines.

▪ Then I get up and read the papers and magazines.

report

▪ Many of the current crop of celebrity exercise videos can actually be bad for you, reports the Consumers Association magazine Which?

▪ It has been reported in Fortune magazine that Oprah Winfrey has an estimated annual income of $ 40 million.

▪ Why not try some of the Hollywood chat-ups recently reported by Spy magazines.

▪ S., however, have long maintained privately that cheating goes on in the data reported to magazines.

▪ The events were first reported by Newsweek magazine.

write

▪ Most of them are early, including two conventional religious pieces and a charming salon song written for a magazine.

▪ Joe wrote extensively for the magazine and became a literary editor during his final year.

▪ She neither wrote for the student magazine, nor was particularly remembered.

▪ He kept up his Internet ties, wrote for some Internetoriented magazines and eventually started landing deals for Netrelated books.

▪ Ever since I won a short-story competition some years ago I’ve wanted to write for magazines.

▪ The impromptu concerts have been written up in national magazines and people travel hundreds of miles to take part in the fun.

▪ You let me read that story you wrote for your class magazine: The Dragon’s Mouth.

▪ Requests for interviews, invitations to speak to students, and opportunities to write articles for magazines poured in.

PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES

girlie magazine/calendar etc

glossy magazine/brochure etc

▪ A glossy magazine designed to satisfy the CEOs ego may go wide of the mark with the factory workers.

▪ Chapanis suggested that computers are not quite as easy to work as the glossy brochures suggest.

▪ I had read the literature, listened to the tape and examined the glossy brochure.

▪ I have simply refined the role of glossy magazines.

▪ It can be seen smiling from the cover of glossy magazines that celebrate celebrity as much as sport.

▪ They strike beautiful poses that could go unaltered into glossy magazines but tell us little about them.

▪ Yes, the glossy magazines should avoid using images of clearly under-nourished models or promoting the heroin-chic look.

▪ You may obtain snapshots using scissors and your favorite glossy magazine.

have your nose in a book/magazine/newspaper

naughty jokes/magazines/films etc

EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES

▪ a model turned TV presenter, who has been on the cover of all the men’s magazines

▪ a photographic magazine

▪ a photography magazine

▪ Hillary Clinton is featured on the cover of this week’s Time magazine.

▪ I bought some magazines for the trip — Cosmopolitan and Vanity Fair.

▪ travel magazines

EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS

▪ As Peter and James came in, she threw down the magazine she was reading, stood up and came towards them.

▪ Cataldo has a background in the tech press, having worked at Computer Life and Electronic Entertainment magazines.

▪ Divisional Secretaries, please keep the magazine informed of meetings, dinners and any other occasion that your Division is involved in.

▪ Joe wrote extensively for the magazine and became a literary editor during his final year.

▪ Lanskoi and Rostovtsev read the magazine avidly.

▪ The magazine will also be sold on newsstands nationwide and offered by subscription.

журнал, магазин, кассета, магазинный, журнальный

существительное

- журнал; периодическое издание

magazine article — журнальная статья, статья в журнале
magazine editor — редактор журнала

- склад боеприпасов
- вещевой склад
- артиллерийский погреб
- мор. погреб боеприпасов
- воен. пистолетная обойма; магазин (для патронов)
- тех. магазин (для подачи изделий в автомат)
- фото кассета
- кино бобина
- уст. склад, хранилище товаров

Мои примеры

Словосочетания

a senior editor for the magazine — старший редактор журнала  
a love quiz in a magazine — любовная викторина в журнале  
to discontinue a magazine — прекратить подписываться на журнал  
a fat magazine — толстый журнал  
magazine advertisement — рекламное объявление в журнале  
fashion magazine — журнал мод  
popular magazine — массовый, популярный журнал  
powder magazine — пороховой погреб  
magazine case — магазинная коробка  
to subscribe to a magazine — подписаться на журнал  
subscription to a magazine — подписка на журнал  
magazine audience survey — опрос читательской аудитории журнала  

Примеры с переводом

The magazine conducted a survey.

Журнал провёл опрос.

The magazine is published weekly.

Журнал выходит еженедельно.

The magazine is a cook’s delight.

Этот погреб является мечтой повара.

She subscribes to several gardening magazines.

Она выписывает несколько журналов по садоводству.

She swatted the fly with a magazine.

Она прибила муху журналом.

He tripped over a pile of magazines.

Он споткнулся о груду журналов.

She found an old issue of the magazine.

Она нашла старый номер этого журнала.

ещё 23 примера свернуть

Примеры, ожидающие перевода

The magazine promotes gracious living.

She writes a monthly column for the magazine.

These is a lot of advertising in that magazine.

Для того чтобы добавить вариант перевода, кликните по иконке , напротив примера.

Формы слова

noun
ед. ч.(singular): magazine
мн. ч.(plural): magazines

8 Letters

4 Consonants

4 Vowels

3 Syllables

Types Of Speech
You can use magazine as a noun in a sentence.
About Magazine
A 3 syllables noun and 8 letters with the letters a, e, g, i, m, n, and z, 4 consonants, 4 vowels and 3 syllables with the middle letters az. Magazine starts with a consonant and ends with a vowel with the starting letters m, ma, mag, maga, magaz, and the ending characters are e, ne, ine, zine, azine, ..
Definition
A metal frame or container holding cartridges; can be inserted into an automatic gun
Origin/Roots
Middle French
Pig Latin
Magazine in Pig Latin is said as «agazinemay or agazinemway».
Unigram
m | a | g | a | z | i | n | e
Bigram
ma | ag | ga | az | zi | in | ne
Trigram
mag | aga | gaz | azi | zin | ine
Quadrigram
maga | agaz | gazi | azin | zine
Word Gram
  • second letter a
  • third letter is g
  • fourth letter is a
  • fifth letter is z
  • sixth letter is i
  • Use As A Noun
Noun Examples
a metal frame or container holding cartridges;
can be inserted into an automatic gun


a storehouse (as a compartment on a warship) where weapons and ammunition are stored


product consisting of a paperback periodic publication as a physical object;
«tripped over a pile of magazines»


a light-tight supply chamber holding the film and supplying it for exposure as required


a periodic paperback publication;
«it takes several years before a magazine starts to break even or make money»


a business firm that publishes magazines;
«he works for a magazine«


  • Synonyms
  • Anagrams
  • Hypernyms
  • Hyponyms
  • Part Meronyms

Synonyms (Cognitive Synonyms) For «Magazine»

There are 147 synonyms available. These are cognitive relationship words which is to say they have a similar meaning, mean the same thing, or have close definition and relationship to magazine.

Synonym Definition
Ammo Dump
Annual a reference book that is published regularly once every year
Archive a depository containing historical records and documents
Archives a depository containing historical records and documents
Armory a place where arms are manufactured
Armoury a place where arms are manufactured
Arsenal a place where arms are manufactured
Artillery Park
Attic (architecture) a low wall at the top of the entablature
hides the roof
Ballpark a facility in which ball games are played (especially baseball games)
«take me out to the ballpark»

View all cognitive synonyms for Magazine

Anagrams

There are 1 anagrams from magazine.

Anagram Definition
Magazine a metal frame or container holding cartridges
can be inserted into an automatic gun

View English words with the unique letters used in magazine. Words With The Letters Aegimnz

Hypernyms

Magazine has 1 hypernyms.

Word Definition
Supply Chamber

Hyponyms

There are 1 hyponyms for magazine

Word Definition
Pincurl Clip

Part Meronyms

There are 1 part meronyms for the word magazine

Word Definition
Gun the discharge of a gun as signal or as a salute in military ceremonies;
«a twenty gun salute»

Magazine Is In These Word Lists

  • Starts With M
    • Eight letters, starting with m
    • Starting with m, ending with e
    • Eight letters with the second letter a
    • Four consonants, starting with m
    • Four vowels, starting with m
    • Three syllables, starting with m
  • Ends With E
    • Eight letters, ending in e
    • Four consonants, ending in e
    • Four vowels, ending in e
    • Three syllables, ending in e
  • Spelled With / Contains Letters
    • Solve the puzzle _a_a_i_e
    • Solve the puzzle _ag_zi_e
    • Solve the puzzle _aga_ine
    • Solve the puzzle _agaz_ne



Completed AZ word finder features completed

  • Word Unscambler has been renamed and will be altered to a complete Anagram Solver
  • Syllable counter is now available for text and documents.
  • In The Middle / In The Center word finding. Searching «two syllable words with qu in the middle», «ab in the center»,etc. will bring you to a list of words spelled with _a-z_. For «exactly center» use a search like «6 letters with qu in the middle»
  • Word unscrambling. For fastest speed possible, you will now land on the top viewed set of characters for that set of letters.
  • New search abilities «words with all vowels» or «words with no vowels», «ends in a vowel», or «start with a vowel».
  • EzoicPuzzle solving using underscores or dashes such as «solve _ _ e _ _ _ _ _ _, singular nouns 4 vowels and 3 syllables»
  • Find words or names by their second, third and fourth letter up to the eighth letter with eazy search like «words with the second letter b».
  • Puzzle solver & missing letters. Wordbrain Themes, Words With Friends, Scrabble, 4Pics1Word, Word Cookies cheats, answers, and more. Example answers search: «solve the puzzle b_r», complete this 6 letter word from o-e-h, «spelled like out», «words containing out». Use an underscore or dash where the puzzle is missing a letter.
  • Length queries including 6 letter words now include quick navigation for speech type and starts/ends letters such as 6 letter words with the second letter c.
  • Rhymes and sounds like tool for any word, spelling, or text entered. Different results appear for sounds and rhymes.
  • Palindromes word Lists now available by searching palindrome words.
  • Unscrambler & Decoder — decode phrases such as «dining table» for «egbindinatl».
  • Negative search filters words that do not have the letter e
  • Quick word find. Single word searches bring you to the word page. Solving word puzzles using an underscore or dash ( Example: _a_t_i_a ). All words/letters without a dedicated page will be unscrambled.
  • Find scrabble words by points! Add «scrabble» in your query, such as Scrabble words with 14 points.
  • Favorite words to your account

View All English Words


Any Word finder ideas you want? Send a word find feature request to let me know.

Are you interested in learning Japanese while improving your English with You Go Words!? You can learn Japanese online and free with Misa of Japanese Ammo including grammer and vocabulary.

In Progress Finder features I’m working on.

  • Phonograms searching coming soon due to many users searching such as «words ending with a multiple phonogram»
  • Root word search. Show with prefix and suffix options, only if it has a root word.
  • Alternative spelling of words from American English to British English. Mouse over example: Color
  • Printable & downloadable word lists.
  • Frequency of a words appearance in books, and other texts.
  • Allow word find such as «words which contain the consonants N, T, and R». This would provide a list of words with letters in a specific order, such as the consonants in the order of ntr.
  • Plural and singular words with information and example sentences.
  • Word games by school grade from Kindergarten to grade 12.
  • Provide words that can be used twice or more in one sentence with example sentences.
  • Paraphrasing, pronunciation, and free grammar tools.
  • Seperate words by area of focus. ( Technology, Education, Science, Psychology, etc. )

Did You Find Your Words?

If you could not find the words you were looking for, please submit feedback or leave a comment below. Let me know what word list you could not find, and I’ll be sure to get it fixed up for you.

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