- More From The Quarries Of Last Chance Gulch
- Office From The Web
- More From The Web Proxy
- More From The Folks Of Muddy Fork
- More From The Web Domain
Editor | Chantelle Horton |
---|---|
Categories | fashion, women's lifestyle |
Frequency | Fortnightly (weekly from 2007) |
Publisher | Bauer Verlagsgruppe |
Year founded | 1988[1] |
Final issue | 2013 |
Country | United Kingdom |
Based in | London |
Language | British English |
More! was a fortnightly, later weekly, women's fashion magazine and associated website[2] published on Tuesdays in the United Kingdom by Bauer London Lifestyle.[3] It included celebrity news, high street fashion, and sex tips. The magazine was published fortnightly until September 2007, when it became a weekly publication[1] to compete with Look. More USA is still published.
More and more definition is - to a progressively increasing extent. Recent Examples on the Web There are more and more tiers of tastings, in which deeper experiences, tours, and/or food pairings are offered for more money. — Matt Kettmann, SFChronicle.com, 'The essential Santa Barbara County winery bucket list,' 17 Dec. 2020 But more and more companies, institutions and wealthy individuals. The Hill is a top US political website, read by the White House and more lawmakers than any other site - vital for policy, politics and election campaigns.
On 22 April 2013, Bauer Media Group announced that it would cease publication of More! magazine and its website.[4] In its closing web comments, the publisher reported that continuing challenging economic conditions meant that the product was no longer viable.
History and profile[edit]
More! magazine was launched in 1988, aimed at older teenage girls. In 2002, it was relaunched as a lifestyle magazine for young women.[1]
The ABC in August 2009 revealed a 17.3% growth of year-on-year circulation, making More! the UK's fastest-growing glossy celeb weekly.
The magazine launched its own annual fashion awards in 2004.[5]
Also in 2009, the magazine sponsored The City[6] when it was shown on MTV.
Circulation[edit]
According to the ABC, the magazine had an average net circulation of 188,265 from July to December 2010.[7]
Period | Average net circulation (data[8]) | Change year-on-year |
---|---|---|
Jan-Jun 2010 | 187,159 | _ |
Jul-Dec 2010 | 188,265 | _ |
Jan-Jun 2011 | 170,033 | −9.7% |
Content[edit]
More From The Quarries Of Last Chance Gulch
The content of More! magazine was divided into sections: 'celebs', 'fashion and beauty', 'men and relationships' and 'every week'.
The fashion content in the magazine had an emphasis on affordable high street clothing - items from Primark, New Look and similar chains were often featured.
Regular features included:
- Look what we bought - the magazine travel to a different UK shopping centre each week and ask women in the target audience to change into new clothes which they've just bought
- The big question - 40 men are asked the same question, such as 'What's the cutest thing your girlfriend does?' and 'What was the last text you sent?'
- Rehab - advice from experts about health, relationships and careers
- Position of the week - each week a different sex position was illustrated
Staff[edit]
Position | Person |
---|---|
Editor | Chantelle Horton |
Deputy Editor | Louise Burke |
News and Entertainment Director | Leigh Purves |
Features Editor | Louise Ward |
Executive Style Director | Sophie Stevens |
Art Director | Daniel Knight |
Picture Director | Tijen Denizmen |
Production Editor | Rebecca Morten |
References[edit]
Office From The Web
- ^ abcStephen Brook. 'More magazine goes weekly'. The Guardian. Retrieved 9 March 2015.
- ^'Celebrity News, Showbiz Gossip, Fashion & More - heatworld - Page 1'. heatworld. Retrieved 9 March 2015.
- ^'Archived copy'. Archived from the original on 2008-12-19. Retrieved 2009-06-30.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- ^'Celebrity News, Showbiz Gossip, Fashion & More - heatworld - Page 1'. heatworld. Retrieved 9 March 2015.
- ^'More magazine launches its own fashion awards'. pressgazette.co.uk. Archived from the original on 20 March 2012. Retrieved 9 March 2015.
- ^The City (MTV series)
- ^http://www.abc.org.uk/Data/ProductPage.aspx?tid=1483
- ^'Archived copy'(PDF). Archived from the original(PDF) on 2010-12-05. Retrieved 2009-06-30.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
Grammar-Quizzes › Clauses › Comparative Clauses › The more, the more
Express that two things vary together
In Context
At 3:20 in the early morning, we were awakened from our sleep by the shaking of our bed. As we lay there, the shaking became more intense. Things started to fall. The louder it became, the more we understood that we needed to take cover. We rolled out of bed and under it, and we waited for the shaking to end. When it did, the room was still and silent except for our beating hearts.
Google now chrome pc. We found our phones and used the flashlights to locate our shoes and coats. The lights were not working, so we knew this was a bad earthquake. We walked around and surveyed the damage. The more we looked, the more stuff—glass, dishware, ceiling plaster, fireplace bricks—we found lying on the floor. Fortunately, we were not hurt. (South Napa, California 2014)
Two things vary— The more vs. As
THE MORE…, THE… |
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We use a reduced clause in each part of a The more…, the … expression. The correlative comparative is a paired construction. Each part is syntactically alike. A comma separates the two clauses. |
The more the building shook, the more we held on. |
The louder it became, the more we saw things falling down. |
The more we saw, the less we could believe. |
The more we looked, the fewer things we found to retrieve. |
More From The Web Proxy
AS MORE, THEN |
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The meaning varies from cause-effect actions to simply same-time occurrences. Not every As more, then sentence can be restated as a The more…, the … expression. |
As/Because the shaking of the building grew stronger, we held on more. |
As/Because it became louder, we saw things falling down. |
As we saw more (destruction), it was harder to believe (what we saw). |
As we looked, we found fewer things to retrieve (from the debris). |
debris (N) – the pieces of something that are left after it has been destroyed in an accident, explosion
plaster (N) – the wall or ceiling finish (a substance that is applied to walls in a pasty form, then dries hard, and then can be painted)
retrieve (V) – find something and bring it back
More From The Folks Of Muddy Fork
survey (V) – take a general or comprehensive (over all) view of something, inspect, examine
take cover (VP) – move to a safe or protected place
More From The Web Domain
(Huddleston 13 §4.6)
Windows vista browser download. Related pages More / -er, Farther/Further, Comparisons.