newsweek in English

noun

weekly American magazine that covers current events and topics of general interest

Use "newsweek" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "newsweek" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "newsweek", or refer to the context using the word "newsweek" in the English Dictionary.

1. to take out an annual subscription to 'Newsweek'

2. According to Newsweek magazine, the historian concluded: “Hell disappeared.

3. The prize was a lifetime's subscription to "Newsweek".

4. “Record numbers are now playing the market.”—Newsweek, July 5, 1999.

5. ( Newsweek calls it a " rhetorical bomb . " ) Go figure .

6. Frank Deford is a special correspondent for Newsweek magazine.

7. Are you interested in taking out a subscription to Newsweek ?

8. This week a poll in Newsweek merely served to underscore this picture.

9. Jonathan is a journalist and blogger, contributing to Newsweek and other publications and Web sites.

10. Newsweek Courageously Warns that Sex-Change Surgery Might Just Destroy Your Life

11. And as Newsweek magazine notes: “The rate of exchange is appallingly cheap.”

12. Cole was able to retrieve the roll and have it sent to Newsweek.

13. Newsweek Courageously Warns that Sex-Change Surgery Might Just Destroy Your Life By Dr

14. They are pictured here for their 25th anniversary Newsweek retrospective on the Internet.

15. James is a self-styled "Celebutante"; Newsweek coined the word and St

16. Aristos Georgiou is a science writer and news reporter for Newsweek based in London

17. “Last year’s best-selling videogame,” according to “Newsweek” magazine, “was Grand Theft Auto 3.”

18. By contrast, Newsweek said, the first reaction of the pundit class was near hysteria.

19. She told Newsweek magazine that Mia, Allen's lover for 12 years, was hot-tempered and terrified her children.

20. “New research shows that gestures often help speakers access words from their memory banks,” reports Newsweek.

21. Brinks Home™ has been awarded America’s Best In-State Customer Service 2020 by Newsweek

22. One reason is the “growing acceptance of bankruptcy as just another lifestyle choice,” says Newsweek.

23. This pessimistic view recently appeared in a letter from a reader in the magazine Newsweek.

24. A Newsweek reporter, press credentials pinned to his coat and not interfering with police, was coolly and systematically beaten.

25. "He came to the most restricted meetings of the Arab mujahedin," Hanif told Newsweek last week.

26. In 1996 “a record 1.2 million Americans filed for bankruptcy, up 44 percent from 1994,” states Newsweek magazine.

27. “We’re losing vast amounts of important scientific and historical material because of disintegration or obsolescence,” says Newsweek magazine.

28. 28 For generations, Time and Newsweek fought to define the national news agenda every Monday on newsstand.

29. THESE words, quoted last year in Newsweek magazine, reflect the feelings of many people living in today’s turbulent world.

30. Newsweek magazine of March 5, 1973, shows a growing trend among teen-agers toward alcohol, often in place of drugs.

31. A report in Newsweek makes this observation: “Users can carefully edit their e-mails and present themselves in the most flattering way. . . .

32. Cheshire solved the mystery behind her demise, and Newsweek ran an article about her detective work, with a photo showing her typing Barefoot …

33. A memo obtained by Newsweek that circulated among customs officers and agriculture specialists in 2007 noted that Bushmeat is "a

34. On the negative side, Newsweek magazine viewed their behavior as a kind of madness, a mass sexual delirium, labeling Bobbysoxers immoral female juvenile delinquents

35. Newsweek reports that various “Third World” nations are now saying that their governments will ‘have no difficulties in dealing with a Communist regime.’

36. —Newsweek; The Kraemers will introduce her slowly, first exposing her to people who have cats before letting her Cavort with their other two felines

37. According to experts, “crime rates rise when social controls —the family, the church, the neighborhood, and all the invisible bonds of a coherent community— break down,” states Newsweek.

38. In conversation with NEWSWEEK, Gates was frank about the challenge he faces in forcing what Eisenhower called the "military-industrial complex" to adjust to the new budget realities.

39. A devastating read that will leave your heart, like the Grinch’s, a few sizes larger.” —The Guardian “Exceedingly good.” —Newsweek “A little Life is unlike anything else out there

40. A Newsweek magazine report noted: “Your ear can safely handle two hours with a power drill (100 dB), but not more than 30 minutes in a noisy video arcade (110 dB).

41. She singled out the Beastie Boys as a major influence, telling Newsweek that she had always wanted to be like them and aspired to make "youthful, irreverent anthems" as well.

42. An issue of Newsweek referenced this quote, and compared Bush and Cheney to Vader and Palpatine, respectively, in a satirical article comparing politicians to various Star Wars and Star Trek characters.

43. Definition of Blankety-blank (Entry 2 of 2) : wretch, fool —used as a generalized expression of disapproval that Blankety-blank can't make up his mind whether he's for us or against us — Newsweek

44. Informal : high on cocaine Depending on whom you listen to, he was either too lazy, too broke or too Coked-up to go out on assignment … — Anna Quindlen, Newsweek, 2 June 2003 Two men, two …

45. Per Newsweek Sessions and Tuberville have recently traded barbs on the campaign trail, with Tuberville Accusings Sessions of taking a $24,000 speaking fee from “swampy special interest groups seeking his favor,” namely a global investment firm called Skybridge Capital

46. The phenomenon called ' Barebacking ' is used as a term descriptive of a specific sexual practice, and is a fairly recent terminology born out of the gay community in America, and appearing officially in the media via a Newsweek article in 1997.

47. Per Newsweek Sessions and Tuberville have recently traded barbs on the campaign trail, with Tuberville Accusings Sessions of taking a $24,000 speaking fee from “swampy special interest groups seeking his favor,” namely a global investment firm called Skybridge Capital

48. ● While reporting on “Homosexuals in the Churches,” particularly those in the Roman Catholic archdiocese of San Francisco, Newsweek magazine points out that “over the last decade homosexual caucuses . . . have sprung up in mainline Protestant denominations and inspired similar organizations among Mennonites, Pentecostals, Mormons, Christian Scientists, Seventh-day Adventists and Jews.

49. Peter Benchley began his career as a novelist in 1974 with the publication of Jaws, which was made into a hugely successful film.His other books include The Deep, The Island, The Girl of the Sea of Cortez, “Q” Clearance, Rummies, Beast, White Shark, and Shark Trouble.He was also a speechwriter for President Lyndon Johnson and a journalist for such magazines as Newsweek and National Geographic.

50. Peter Benchley began his career as a novelist in 1974 with the publication of Jaws, which was made into a hugely successful film.His other books include The Deep, The Island, The Girl of the Sea of Cortez, “Q” Clearance, Rummies, Beast, White Shark, and Shark Trouble.He was also a speechwriter for President Lyndon Johnson and a journalist for such magazines as Newsweek and National Geographic.