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Volume typically refers to the number of years the publication has been circulated, and issue refers to how many times that periodical has been published during that year. For example, the April 2011 publication of a monthly magazine first published in 2002 would be listed as, "volume 10, issue 4".
Epilogue was intended as a twice-yearly periodical, though the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War and the editors' consequent move to London in August 1936 disrupted its publication schedule. [5] It had an octavo hardback format and ran to about 250 pages per number. Laura Riding was listed as the journal's editor, Robert Graves as its associate ...
[8] Initially the publication included original prints such as the frontispiece for Vol 1, #1 (Jun 1940) a two color woodcut by Hans Alexander Mueller and Vol 1, #3 (December 1940) a black and white wood engraving by Paul Landacre. By Volume 8 (1953) the focus of the periodical had shifted to a trade journal.
Journal homepage; Computer is an IEEE ... (partial from 1975 volume 8, complete from 1988 volume 21) IEEE Computer Society This page was last edited on 31 July 2024 ...
The Readers' Guide has been published regularly since 1901 by the H. W. Wilson Company, and is a staple of public and academic reference libraries throughout the United States; a retrospective index of general periodicals published from 1890 to 1982 is also available.
The New Monthly Magazine and Literary Journal. 1823. Vol 9. Historical Register at Google Books. The New Monthly Magazine and Literary Journal. Vol 9. Jan–June 1825 at Google Books. The New Monthly Magazine and Literary Journal. Vol 16 Part 1, 1826 at Google Books; The New Monthly Magazine and Literary Journal. Vol 21 Part 3, 1827 at Google Books
The name Savoy was borrowed from the new London hotel and was intended to be suggestive of modernity and opulence.. The Savoy was a magazine of literature, art, and criticism published in eight numbers from January to December 1896 in London.
In the technical sense a journal has continuous pagination throughout a volume. Thus, Bloomberg Businessweek, which starts each issue anew with page one, is a magazine, but the Journal of Business Communication, which continues the same sequence of pagination throughout the coterminous year, is a journal.