MAGAZINE


Meaning of MAGAZINE in English

I. |magə|zēn, |maig- noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle French, from Old Provençal, from Arabic makhāzin, plural of makhzan storehouse, from khazana to store up

1.

a. : a place where goods or supplies are stored : warehouse

each hamlet … possesses a magazine inside which families deposit all their provisions — H.T.Norris

in the compting rooms and fur magazines of the concern — Walter O'Meara

b. archaic : a country or district especially rich in natural resources or produce

set down in a perfect magazine of fruit and vegetables, grain and wine — Leitch Ritchie

c. archaic : a city viewed as a marketing center

islands … are now converted into complete magazines for all kinds of European goods — Gentleman's Magazine

2.

a. : a place to store ammunition: as

(1) : a building in which ammunition and explosives are kept on a military installation

(2) : a compartment of a ship used to store ammunition and explosives

b. archaic : something resembling a place to store ammunition

stored his magazine of malice with weapons equally sharp — Samuel Johnson

3.

a. : the contents stored in a magazine: as

(1) : an accumulation of munitions of war

a large magazine of darts and arrows — Edward Gibbon

(2) : a stock or store of provisions or goods

magazine of flesh, milk, butter, and cheese — Daniel Defoe

b. : something resembling the contents of a magazine

truth becomes … a new weapon in the magazine of power — R.W.Emerson

4.

a.

(1) : a periodical that usually contains a miscellaneous collection of articles, stories, poems, and pictures and is directed at the general reading public

(2) : a periodical containing special material directed at a group having a particular hobby, interest, or profession (as education, photography, or medicine) or at a particular age group (as children, teen-agers)

alumni magazine

— compare little magazine

b. : a special section of a newspaper usually appearing on Sunday

seek a much wider audience for the paper … through an enlarged magazine — Bruce Bliven b. 1889

5. : a supply chamber: as

a. : a holder that is incorporated in or attachable to a gun and that contains cartridges to be fed into the gun chamber by the operation of the piece — see clip e

b. : a lighttight chamber containing plates, sheet film, or rollable film for use in or on a camera or containing both feed and take-up spools for film for use in or on a motion-picture camera or projector

c. : the chambers to hold circulating matrices in a typesetting machine

II. transitive verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

archaic : to store in or as if in a magazine : store up for use

III. noun

: a radio or television program presenting usually several short segments on a variety of topics

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.