subscribe
- subscribe
01. If you [subscribe] to an Internet service with this company, you will also receive really good rates for long distance phone calls.
02. I don't need a [subscription] to the newspaper because I can read it for free at work.
03. I don't [subscribe] to the theory that the poor somehow benefit from cuts to taxes for the rich.
04. Sophie couldn't wait for the first magazine to come when we got her a [subscription] to Archie comics for her birthday.
05. The old man canceled his [subscription] to the newspaper because he was so upset by the right-wing editorials.
06. I don't [subscribe] to any one faith. I believe that God is whatever you perceive him or her or it to be.
07. My grandfather [subscribes] to a number of charities.
08. My daughter got a free introductory issue of a number of different magazines by signing up for a [subscription] for each of them, and then immediately canceling them.
09. I don't really read this magazine much, so I'm just going to let the [subscription] run out, and I won't renew it.
10. The university library [subscribes] to hundreds of different newspapers, magazines and academic journals.
11. I do not [subscribe] to the belief that men are better in business than women.
12. Government medical insurance here in British Columbia is available to all residents on a voluntary [subscription] basis for a low monthly fee.
13. The human rights organization Amnesty International has hundreds of thousands of members, [subscribers] and supporters in over 150 countries.
Grammatical examples in English.
2013.
Synonyms:
Look at other dictionaries:
subscribe — sub‧scribe [səbˈskraɪb] verb 1. [intransitive] to pay money regularly in order to have a newspaper or magazine sent to you, or to receive a broadcasting, telephone, or Internet service: subscribe to • Which Internet Service Provider do you… … Financial and business terms
subscribe — sub·scribe /səb skrīb/ vb sub·scribed, sub·scrib·ing [Latin subscribere, literally, to write beneath, from sub under + scribere to write] vt 1: to write (one s name) underneath or at the end of a document we now subscribe our names as witnesses W … Law dictionary
Subscribe.ru — Subscribe.ru … Википедия
Subscribe — Sub*scribe , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Subscribed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Subscribing}.] [L. subscribere, subscriptum; sub under + scribere to write: cf. F. souscrire. See {Scribe}.] 1. To write underneath, as one s name; to sign (one s name) to a document … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
subscribe to — arrange to receive something, especially a periodical, regularly by paying in advance. → subscribe subscribe to feel agreement with (an idea or proposal). → subscribe … English new terms dictionary
subscribe — ► VERB 1) (often subscribe to) arrange to receive something, especially a periodical regularly by paying in advance. 2) (subscribe to) contribute (a sum of money) to a project or cause. 3) apply to participate in. 4) (subscribe to) express… … English terms dictionary
Subscribe — Sub*scribe , v. i. 1. To sign one s name to a letter or other document. Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. To give consent to something written, by signing one s name; hence, to assent; to agree. [1913 Webster] So spake, so wished, much humbled Eve; but… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
subscribe to — (something) to agree with or support an opinion, belief, or theory. I subscribe to the notion of lying down when the urge to exercise strikes me … New idioms dictionary
subscribe — [v1] pay for use; contribute advocate, ante up*, buy, chip in*, come through*, consent, donate, do one’s part*, endorse, enroll, give, grant, ink*, make a deal*, offer, pitch in*, pledge, promise, put up*, register, second, set, sign, signature,… … New thesaurus
subscribe — [səb skrīb′] vt. subscribed, subscribing [ME subscriben < L subscribere: see SUB & SCRIBE] 1. to sign (one s name) at the end of a document, etc. 2. to write one s signature on (a document, etc.) as an indication of consent, approval,… … English World dictionary
subscribe to — index abide, accede (concede), advocate, agree (comply), assent, assure (insure) … Law dictionary