快好知 kuaihz


nast造句
(1) Indeed, the new regime has refocused Conde Nast, once notorious for its excesses, firmly on the bottom line. (2) Renate Ku nast, the new food and agriculture minister, will also have responsibility for consumer affairs. (3) Conde Nast Traveler magazine readers last year rated Lindbergh among the top 10 most-popular airports because of its proximity to downtown. (4) Conde Nast is expected to start or buy another five magazines in the next five years, Mr Florio says. (5) She joined Conde Nast in 1959, working in the advertising department of Glamour magazine. (6) Nast started that whole trend. (7) Conde Nast Publications Inc. aims to continue adding more magazine titles in China, already a top-five global market for the U.S. publisher, the head of its international arm said. (8) Respected media owners such as McGraw-Hill and Conde Nast Publications Inc. are closing print titles or slashing investments in traditional publications to redeploy resources elsewhere. (9) If Dickens shaped the Anglophone Christmas traditions, Thomas Nast and Clement Moore provided the English-speaking countries with their popular images of Santa Claus. (10) Mr Nast was the first to introduce a fat Santa in the now-traditional red suit and big leather belt. (11) In the nineteenth century, Thomas Nast , an American cartoonist gave Santa his look—a happy fat man in red and white clothing. (12) Conde Nast has already signed up to produce electronic versions of Wired and the New Yorker using the software and Martha Stewart has also agreed to put her titles online. (13) But despite appearances, by the end of the decade cracks were beginning to strain the Conde Nast empire. (14) By day I am the editor of mainstream American magazine called Wired, I work for Conde Nast, the biggest magazine publisher and by night I am a blogger and I write a book about niches. (15) Custom holds that the 19th century political cartoonist Thomas Nast popularized the symbol. (16) 1870-the Democratic party was represented as a donkey for the first time in a cartoon by Thomas Nast in "Harper's Weekly."