[ noun ] small silvery drumfish often mistaken for white perch; found along coasts of United States from New York to Mexico <noun.animal>
Mademoiselle \Ma`de*moi`selle"\, n.; pl. {Mesdemoiselles}. [F., fr. ma my, f. of mon + demoiselle young lady. See {Damsel}.] 1. A French title of courtesy given to a girl or an unmarried lady, equivalent to the English Miss. --Goldsmith.
2. (Zo["o]l.) A marine food fish ({Sci[ae]na chrysura}), of the Southern United States; -- called also {yellowtail}, and {silver perch}.
At Mademoiselle, ad pages through August were down 14% from a year earlier, while Self reported a 28% decline.
"Emaciation isn't all that it's cracked up to be," said the lanky comedian in the July issue of Mademoiselle magazine.
His faultless use of fabric and color went from slinky little cream satin "Mademoiselle de Paris" short tea dresses to a fresh blue plaid organdy dance dress with puffy sleeves and deep decollete.
When I came back, I found out Kevin Costner had been cast," Russell said in the December issue of Mademoiselle magazine.
Spurning big advertisers may be a risky practice at a time when Conde Nast Publications Inc., publisher of Vogue, Mademoiselle and Glamour, is starting to react aggressively to the inroads Elle has made in its territory.
To amuse the jaded fashion crowd and launch a new watch collection called "Mademoiselle," the Chanel company is opening up the Chanel suite at the Ritz for the week.
"I guess what I've tried to do with most of my music is have it reflect as much of real life as possible," Springsteen, 38, says in the August issue of Mademoiselle magazine.
And when Mademoiselle said, `You can do it,' that was the end of the discussion," Copland recalled.