newsstand 的定义
- a stall or other place at which newspapers and often periodicals are sold, as on a street corner or in a building lobby.
newsstand 近义词
等同于 kiosk
更多newsstand例句
- Visit a school for housewives in Iceland, an iconic newsstand in Paris, two canine guardians that watch over the oldest skate park in Santiago, Chile, and much more.
- Both will be full city takeovers, including digital bulletins on major Chicago expressways, and digital bus shelters and wrapped newsstands in Philadelphia, he said.
- By the early 1950s there were some 150 similar titles on the newsstands.
- For more tales of resilience, check out the latest issue of Popular Science—it’s on newsstands now!
- At its height, The Source had a reported circulation of 500,000 and was outselling Rolling Stone on the newsstand.
- Penance is available at the Newsstand, Miami and at alldayeveryday.com for $45—$500.
- But he said that when he was 12, his uncle had a newsstand in Philadelphia, and he was reading the papers at a very young age.
- Newsstand sales, which comprise a small portion of sales but have much bigger margins, have been falling across the industry.
- Bush had to be converted into Churchill for the sake of the national psyche, or newsstand sales, or something or other.
- I tried to use it at a newsstand first, and the man wouldn't touch it.
- The Daily Intelligencer was spread on a newsstand, a smudgy black bannerhead fouling its pure bosom.
- As he did so the steed made a plunge along the sidewalk for several yards, knocking over a barber's pole and a newsstand.
- The time it takes to transfer the literature from our pockets to the window sills, newsstand or bench is about two seconds.
- I stopped in a drug store and saw Astounding Stories on the newsstand.