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gray pageの例文

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  • Gray pages sprout with color in Small's captivating drawings.
  • The Standard, with its gray pages and text overload, looks like a matronly version of the The New Republic.
  • His father Gray Page ( Craig Ball ) was written into the series only for him to use and manipulate Matt.
  • Writers devised relationship problems between the two when they introduce Matt's father, Gray Page ( Craig Ball ).
  • A magazine for people who actually like to read, ( beginitalic ) Atlantic Monthly ( enditalic ) seems strangely antiquated, full of gray pages dimmed with type.
  • The Digital Divas are asking adherents to their cause to replace the opening pages of their Web sites with gray pages for a 24-hour period on October 1.
  • News coverage of the discrimination suit brought last spring against Smith Barney moved the issue from the gray pages of the business section to the pizzazz of the 11 o'clock news.
  • Along with Viracept for AIDS, Imitrex for migraines and Prozac for depression, Sporanox is among a rising flood of ads for products once touted almost exclusively in the gray pages of medical journals.
  • To the college student who is more comfortable staring at a computer screen than an old gray page, a recycling center might seem to be the best place for four truckloads of newspaper clippings.
  • But slowly, quietly, in meetings, in think tanks, in the forbidding gray pages of policy journals and even in cloakroom conversations on Capitol Hill, the broad contours of the next stage of modern conservatism are emerging.
  • Come Monday, the Boston Herald's stark gray pages, short screaming headlines, and harder tabloid edges may become a thing of the past, replaced by a kinder, gentler, and more lifestyle-oriented model.
  • After that, his distinguished career as a journalist who works his way to the top of the Times masthead _ surmounting the paper's byzantine bureaucracy and opening its gray pages to livelier journalism _ seems like an afterthought.
  • Tom Wolfe wrote about the magazine : " The " New Yorker " style was one of leisurely meandering understatement, droll when in the humorous mode, tautological and litotical when in the serious mode, constantly amplified, qualified, adumbrated upon, nuanced and renuanced, until the magazine's pale-gray pages became High Baroque triumphs of the relative clause and appository modifier ".