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Sunday supplement

noun

  1. a special section incorporated in the Sunday editions of many newspapers, often containing features on books, celebrities, home entertainment, gardening, and the like.


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Word History and Origins

Origin of Sunday supplement1

An Americanism dating back to 1925–30
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Example Sentences

Dodds was asked if she remained confident that she would still be Welsh leader after the next Welsh Parliament elections in 2026, in a separate interview on BBC Radio Wales' Sunday Supplement, before Davey's interview.

From BBC

"Once the vote was taken over 25 years ago, we determined that the correct approach was to make the assembly work, now the Senedd, for the good of the people of Wales," said Lord Bourne on BBC Radio Wales' Sunday Supplement programme.

From BBC

The Mid & West Wales MS told Radio Wales Sunday Supplement "the right thing for me at this point needs to be the first minister resigning".

From BBC

The son of Ukrainian Jewish immigrants in Toronto who had moved to Los Angeles, Philip was a student at Manual Arts High School, where he befriended a young Jackson Pollock and joined a youth organization that produced The Junior Times, a Sunday supplement in The Los Angeles Times for essays, poems, puzzles and illustrations by kids, for kids.

Speaking to Sunday Supplement on BBC Radio Wales on 19 May, Plaid’s leader Rhun ap Iorwerth did not confirm which way his party would vote were a no confidence motion to be put forward, but said the row over donations and Ms Blythyn’s sacking had become a "distraction".

From BBC

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