full-page

English

Adjective

full-page (not comparable)

  1. (journalism, of a newspaper or magazine article) covering an entire page.
    • 1959 September, “Talking of Trains: Attack and counter-attack”, in Trains Illustrated, page 405:
      Taking a full-page advertisement in the New York Times, the New Haven counter-attacked with vigour.
    • 2015 March 4, Jill Jacobs, “Shmuley Boteach isn’t ‘America’s rabbi’”, in The Washington Post[1], archived from the original on 29 April 2023:
      This past weekend, Rabbi Shmuley Boteach set off a firestorm with his full-page ad in the New York Times accusing National Security Adviser Susan E. Rice of turning a blind eye to the Rwandan genocide when she was on President Bill Clinton’s national security team in the 1990s.

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