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Discover LudwigThe phrase "advertising note" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to a note or message that is intended for advertising purposes, such as promoting a product or service.
Example: "Please include an advertising note in the email to inform customers about our upcoming sale."
Alternatives: "promotional message" or "advertisement memo".
Exact(2)
(Advertising note to American students: you can get a perfectly good PhD at a top British university in under four years).
As a result, the larger (k) and the smaller (z) are, the more likely it is that the market is in the region where the mixed duopoly involves more advertising (note that the function (z=f k)) is strictly increasing).
Similar(53)
He equates Web advertising to the early days of television advertising, noting that networks just relied on the radio model they knew.
It stops short of pinpointing the effects of in-school advertising, noting that "because advertising in ubiquitous in America, it is difficult -- if not impossible -- to distinguish between the effects of advertising to which students are exposed inside and outside of school".
B3 DINING F1-12 ARTS E1-8 SCIENCE/HEALTH Women, Smoking, Early Death A surgeon general report urged stronger measures to discourage women and girls from smoking and to curb advertising, noting that 165,000 women died prematurely in 1997 from smoking-related disease.
Advertising noted that the film came "from the producers of Bridget Jones's Diary", a 2001 romantic comedy film, before mentioning Austen.
The low quality of information provided in journal advertising noted by this review highlight the need of journal editors and publishers to consider regulatory controls for advertising in their publications.
But the union says the strike has badly hurt advertisers and the advertising industry, noting, for example, that Sela Ward, who last week won an Emmy award for best actress in a drama, is not making new Sprint commercials.
Advertising executives note that scientific trials are tightly regulated and that most medical journal articles get careful review.
Advertising executives note that ratings this month on many shows are so low they may force NBC to offer a spate of what are known as make-goods — free commercials to cover shortfalls from rating guarantees.
The word litany has appeared in 482 New York Times articles in the past year, including on Feb. 25 in "In Turnabout, NBC Prime Time Lands in the Cellar" by Bill Carter: Advertising executives note that ratings this month on many shows are so low they may force NBC to offer a spate of what are known as make-goods — free commercials to cover shortfalls from rating guarantees.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com