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subscription
[ suhb-skrip-shuhn ]
noun
- a sum of money given or pledged as a contribution, payment, investment, etc.
- the right to receive a periodical for a sum paid, usually for an agreed number of issues.
- an arrangement for presenting a series of concerts, plays, etc., that one may attend by the payment of a membership fee:
to purchase a 10-concert subscription.
- the right to receive a service or access text online for a certain period of time:
a subscription to a media streaming service; a subscription to an online encyclopedia; a satellite-TV subscription.
- Chiefly British. the dues paid by a member of a club, society, etc.
- a fund raised through sums of money subscribed.
- a sum subscribed.
- the act of appending one's signature or mark, as to a document.
- a signature or mark thus appended.
- something written beneath or at the end of a document or the like.
- a document to which a signature is attached.
- assent, agreement, or approval expressed verbally or by signing one's name.
- Ecclesiastical. assent to or acceptance of a body of principles or doctrines, the purpose of which is to establish uniformity.
- Church of England. formal acceptance of the Thirty-nine Articles of 1563 and the Book of Common Prayer.
subscription
/ əˈɪʃə /
noun
- a payment or promise of payment for consecutive issues of a magazine, newspaper, book, etc, over a specified period of time
- the advance purchase of tickets for a series of concerts, operas, etc
- ( as modifier )
a subscription concert
- an amount of money paid or promised, as to a charity, or the fund raised in this way
- an offer to buy shares or bonds issued by a company
- the act of signing one's name to a document, etc
- a signature or other appendage attached to the bottom of a document, etc
- agreement, consent, or acceptance expressed by or as if by signing one's name
- a signed document, statement, etc
- the membership dues or fees paid to a society or club
- acceptance of a fixed body of articles of faith, doctrines, or principles laid down as universally binding upon all the members of a Church
- med that part of a written prescription directing the pharmacist how to mix and prepare the ingredients: rarely seen today as modern drugs are mostly prepackaged by the manufacturers
- an advance order for a new product
- the sale of books, etc, prior to printing
- ( as modifier )
a subscription edition
- archaic.allegiance; submission
Derived Forms
- ܲˈپ, adjective
Other yvlog Forms
- ܲ··پ [s, uh, b-, skrip, -tiv], adjective
- ܲ·t· adverb
- ԴDzȴܲ·tDz noun
- ȴܲ·tDz noun
- ȴܲ·tDz adjective
- ȴܲ·tDz noun
yvlog History and Origins
Origin of subscription1
Example Sentences
"But I just pushed it aside and didn't think any more of it. I stopped paying for my subscription and that was that."
Coincidentally, we met on the final day of my Match subscription, Jan. 31.
A bigger concern for the UK football industry will be consumers having less money to spend on tickets and TV subscriptions if fears of a recession come to pass.
Many juggle multiple income streams—subscriptions, ad revenue, crowdfunding—just to sustain their work, leaving them vulnerable to burnout and reactive rather than strategic in their output.
The company has tried pivoting to a subscription model, but that has proven to be a hard sell.
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