Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
A pull-quote was reproduced in large type in a box on the Guardian's front page.
The pull-quote was pure Levant: "He took the law into his own hands."
Possible pull-quote for the movie poster: “a murky piece of post-nuclear guignol”
Pull-quote of the month: "Sting really likes squash soup.
Commonly a pull-quote will be in a larger font than the main body of the text, and it is often in italics as well.
The jacket for Glove Pond features a pull-quote written by Douglas Coupland.
This reviewer hopes and trusts — if only to secure her own safety — she has given Heller a usable pull-quote or two for the jacket.
If you like, you could also give values for margin-top and margin-bottom, to create more space between your pull-quote and the text before and after it.
It was a remark that the sub-editor responsible thought sufficiently striking to pick out in large, red type as a pull-quote... and it struck me, for two reasons.
Include your company's most prestigious award in your (nicely designed) email signature line and put a strong pull-quote or media accolade ("2011 editor's choice") at the top of your invoices.
Black levels and color: Here's the pull-quote: The Samsung can produce the deepest shade of black of any flat-panel HDTV we've tested, regardless of technology.
USAT , which ran both phrases in a top-front pull-quote yesterday, does not make a similar retraction; in fact, it repeats both phrases in an inside story today.
The unruly Walsh has already been put on a course for wider fame via a new Comedy Central series and his poster pull-quote urges us to see him before he goes all arena on us.
That probably won't be a pull-quote on the dust jacket of the Loatian cookbook that we're told Totem is working on based upon his family's recipes which at no point require things to actually be cooked.
“War Horse”: DreamWorks has been smartly targeting older academy voters, trotting out a huge pull-quote from roughly 186-year-old film critic Rex Reed in advertisements and playing up the film’s nods to the great John Ford.
To the Editor: The implicit invocation of the Scopes trial in your headline "Indian Tribes' Creationists Thwart Archeologists" (front page, Oct. 22) and pull-quote, "a Sioux official denounces evolution," belittles the important argument made by Vine Deloria Jr. and other Indian thinkers.