107 Verbs to Use for the Word magazine

" "A meeting will be held in the 'old lab' directly after dinner to-day, to make plans for starting a magazine in opposition to The Ronleian.

They read missionary magazines.

He founded, in conjunction with Morrison, a Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge in China, and edited a monthly Chinese magazine, in which he endeavoured to interest the people upon history, geography, and literature.

William Blackwood welcomed any abuse that took his magazine out of "the calm of respectable mediocrity."

(In One act play magazine and radio-drama review, Mar.-Apr. 1941)

In the meantime, the British cruiser Warrior, of 13,500 tons, had been sent down by the explosion of a German shell which had reached her magazine.

Handy Solomon, with a cry of rage, seized another rifle and emptied the magazine at him as fast as the lever could be worked.

If it is true, as already suggested, that Germany's action has only been that of the spark that fires the magazine, still her part in the affair affords such an extraordinarily illuminating text and illustration that one may be excused for dwelling on it.

"Now it has been proved, not to the satisfaction of the Russian authorities of course, that Russian officers of high rank blew the magazine up, because they would have to supply the troops with ammunition after the mobilizationand the ammunition was not there.

Mother keeps all the magazines an' paper novils, an' we allus reads 'em afore we sells 'em.

Broglio then retired over the Rhine into the French dominions, wasting, in his retreat, the country which he had undertaken to protect, and burning towns, and destroying magazines of corn, with such wantonness, as gave reason to believe that he expected commendation from his court for any mischiefs done, by whatever means.

With our older pattern of shell, as used by the Fleet at Jutland and in earlier actions, there was no chance of the burst of the shell, when fired at battle range, taking place inboard, after penetrating the side armour of modern German capital ships, in such a position that the fragments might be expected to reach and explode the magazines.

Immediately after the affair at Lexington he had turned out his company, reinforced by undergraduates from Yale, had seized the New Haven powder magazine and marched over to Cambridge, where the Massachusetts Committeemen took such a fancy to him that they made him a colonel on the spot, with full authority to raise men for an immediate attack on Ticonderoga.

(In Wild West stories and complete novel magazine, Apr. 1934)

" They bought the magazines, but they might just as well not have done so, for when they reached Roland late that afternoon they had hardly peeped inside the covers.

It proved that they published a monthly magazine, "The Working-Men's College Magazine," which was devoted to their interests.

He formed large magazines of provisions, collected military stores, and enrolled all the soldiers he could muster among the Greek population of Constantinople.

So the record continues, till one rubs his eyes and thinks he must have picked up by mistake the last literary magazine.

(In Song hits magazine, May 1945)

He loaned me a magazine, and bought some candy for me; but I didn't see much more of him, for the second time the conductor came in he told me he'd found a nice seat back in the car on the shady side.

" Handy Solomon and Pulz laid hand on two of the rifles near by and began surreptitiously to fill their magazines.

The skipper of the schooner containing the powder magazine wanted to surrender on the spot, especially when he heard that the Americans were getting some hot shot ready for him.

Evadne looked round the room with its soft curtains swaying in the breeze, the cool matting on the floor with a rug or two, the light bookcases with their wealth of thought, the comfortable wicker rockers, the bamboo tables holding several half cut magazines, an open work-basket, a vase with a single rose, while on the low mantel a cluster of graceful lilies were reflected in the mirror.

In 1836 Rev. George Hogarth published an addition to this volume and in 1841 brought forward the first magazine of the sect.

BUXBAUM, EDWIN C. Collecting National geographic magazines.

107 Verbs to Use for the Word  magazine