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Showing results for newsstand. Search instead for teams stand.
Definitions

newsstand

[nooz-stand, nyooz-] / ˈnuzˌstænd, ˈnjuz- /
NOUN
kiosk
Synonyms


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

See Examples For:

Off campus, Kelly Wall extends the program to a former Westwood Village newsstand, where glass “magazines” will be displayed — 136 in all, priced at $300, with 15 given away.

From Los Angeles Times Feb. 24, 2026

One person moved by the tale was Morris Michtom, the proprietor of a Brooklyn, N.Y., candy store and newsstand.

From The Wall Street Journal Feb. 12, 2026

For seven days in early October, Anthropic’s large language model Claude was the brand-in-residence at the Air Mail newsstand, the physical outpost for the digital magazine founded by former Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter.

From MarketWatch Oct. 11, 2025

Out of the old newsstand, which still smelled faintly of cigars, a million diapers were given out to young mothers, along with 10 million wet wipes and 700,000 bottles of baby food and formula.

From Slate Jul. 17, 2025

“Animals in the newsstand again! Didn’t I tell you?”

From "The Cricket in Times Square" by George Selden

When the need for adequate rest areas became undeniable during the pandemic, Los Deliveristas developed a vision to reuse existing public space, like areas with abandoned newsstands, to better serve its members.

From Salon Sep. 3, 2024

The 69-year-old “CBS Mornings” co-anchor joins models Kate Upton, Hunter McGrady and Chrissy Teigen for four separate covers of the magazine, which hits newsstands Friday.

From Seattle Times May 15, 2024

The March issue of British Vogue will be available via digital download and on newsstands from Tuesday 13 February.

From BBC Feb. 8, 2024

Print subscribers and those who purchase a physical copy of The Times at newsstands will get to explore the designs as wrapping-paper prints too.

From Los Angeles Times Dec. 14, 2023

Governor Wallace’s hard face and tightly knit brows, plastered on the front of Time magazine some twelve days later, covered the nation’s coffee tables and city newsstands.

From "While the World Watched: A Birmingham Bombing Survivor Comes of Age during the Civil Rights Movement" by Carolyn Maull McKinstry




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