Magazine /(?)/
Mag·a·zine
Magazine
n.
- A receptacle in which anything is stored, especially military stores, as ammunition, arms, provisions, etc.
- The building or room in which the supply of powder is kept in a fortification or a ship.
- A chamber in a gun for holding a number of cartridges to be fed automatically to the piece.
- A pamphlet published periodically containing miscellaneous papers or compositions.
- A country or district especially rich in natural products.
- A city viewed as a marketing center.
- A reservoir or supply chamber for a stove, battery, camera, typesetting machine, or other apparatus.
- A store, or shop, where goods are kept for sale.
Phrases & Compounds
- Magazine dress
- clothing made chiefly of woolen, without anything metallic about it, to be worn in a powder magazine.
- Magazine gun
- a portable firearm, as a rifle, with a chamber carrying cartridges which are brought automatically into position for firing.
- Magazine stove
- a stove having a chamber for holding fuel which is supplied to the fire by some self-feeding process, as in the common base-burner.
Magazine
v. t.
imp. & p. p. Magazined; p. pr. & vb. n. Magazining
- To store in, or as in, a magazine; to store up for use.