'zine

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See also: zine, Zine, and žíně

English[edit]

Noun[edit]

'zine (plural 'zines)

  1. Alternative form of zine.
    • 1997, Feminist Bookstore News, volume 20, page 58:
      Rockrgrl contains lots of news, features, business suggestions, reviews, and commentary on what’s current for women in rock. Grrlz and ’zine fans will think…well…it rocks!
    • 1997, Surfer, volume 38:
      I have just read the new Gigantor issue of your ’zine with its absolutely fabulously fresh format [October 1996] and I must confess with all verisimilitude that it’s definitely the bomb.
    • 2001, Chérie Turner, “The Revolution”, in Everything You Need to Know About the Riot Grrrl Movement: The Feminism of a New Generation (The Need to Know Library), New York, N.Y.: Rosen Publishing, →ISBN, page 15:
      But Hanna was far from a one-woman crusade. Numerous women talked about feminist ideas and how they related to the punk scene, to pop culture, and to women in their teens and twenties. Tobi Vail, Bikini Kill’s drummer, put out the ’zine Jigsaw, and Donna Dresch of the band Team Dresch created Homocore.
    • 2007, Alexander Theroux, “A Fish Needs a Bicycle”, in Laura Warholic; or, The Sexual Intellectual, Seattle, Wash.: Fantagraphics Books, →ISBN, page 721:
      She yearned for—yearned to adopt and wanted to be adopted by—rock musicians, colorful literary failures, pale headbangers, suavo archetypes with bandannas tied around their biceps, and starting way back in high school long dreamt of having affairs with long-haired guys named Scorch or Trevor or Rick who, even if they smelled unappealingly of cigarettes and booze, were part of the rebellious, ’zine-reading Dial B for Bum-in-Hand youth of today.