back copy
noun
a back issue of a newspaper or magazine
Click any word in a definition or example to find the entry for that word
noun
a newspaper printed on large sheets of paper. Broadsheets are generally believed to contain more serious news than tabloid newspapers, which are smaller, although many broadsheets are now printed in compact size.
noun
a magazine or newspaper that a club or organization produces regularly to give information to its members
noun
an official newspaper that publishes lists of people in government, legal, military, or university jobs
noun
a magazine printed on shiny paper, containing a lot of bright fashionable pictures but not much serious information
noun
newspapers that contain a lot of shocking stories about crime, sex, and famous people
noun
a large thin book with a paper cover, containing reports, photographs, stories etc, usually published once a month or once a week
noun
a set of large printed sheets of folded paper containing news, articles, and other information, usually published every day. There are two main types of newspaper, the quality or broadsheet newspapers that generally deal with serious news issues, and the tabloid newspapers that deal more with subjects such as sport, television actors, and shocking crime stories. A newspaper is usually simply called a paper
noun
a magazine, newspaper, or regular letter that contains official information from an organization such as a political party
noun
a newspaper with fairly small pages mostly containing stories about famous people and not much serious news. More serious newspapers are called broadsheets, which have bigger pages, or compacts.
the various newspapers that are published in a particular country or area
|
|
using the Internet where you work, during working hours, for activities which are not work-related
BuzzWord ArticleOpen Dictionary
… to reveal a small part of your intentions in order to attract support, without actually committing yourself to doing anything
add a wordBlog
A must for anyone with an interest in the changing face of language. The Macmillan Dictionary blog explores English as it is spoken around the world today.
global English and language change from our blog