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Print   /prɪnt/   Listen
Print

noun
1.
The text appearing in a book, newspaper, or other printed publication.
2.
A picture or design printed from an engraving.
3.
A visible indication made on a surface.  Synonym: mark.  "Paw prints were everywhere"
4.
Availability in printed form.  "His book is no longer in print"
5.
A copy of a movie on film (especially a particular version of it).
6.
A fabric with a dyed pattern pressed onto it (usually by engraved rollers).
7.
A printed picture produced from a photographic negative.  Synonym: photographic print.
verb
(past & past part. printed; pres. part. printing)
1.
Put into print.  Synonym: publish.  "These news should not be printed"
2.
Write as if with print; not cursive.
3.
Make into a print.
4.
Reproduce by printing.  Synonym: impress.



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"Print" Quotes from Famous Books



... intimate, touching little jumble of pathetic souvenirs you ever saw in a museum; more like treasures guarded by near relations than a collection for public eyes to see; but that makes the poignant charm of it. I could have sobbed on a pink print frock with a cape, such as Jane Eyre might have worn at Thornfield, and on bits of unfinished needlework, simple lace collars, and water-colour sketches with which Charlotte tried to brighten the walls of her austere home. ...
— Set in Silver • Charles Norris Williamson and Alice Muriel Williamson

... insisted. "I prefer always to remain here, and my father always likes to face the audience. I really believe," she went on, "that he likes to catch the eye of the journalist who writes little gossipy items, and to see his name in print." ...
— The Evil Shepherd • E. Phillips Oppenheim

... their most impossible stories. Their morals, it should be remembered, were not quite the same as ours. There were frequently interminable descriptive details which one could on no account reproduce in print, and without them much of the point of the legends would be lost. So that, with the confusion and disorder of ideas of the Bororos, their peculiar ways of expression, and the mutilation necessary so as not to shock the public, the legends were hardly worth reproducing. ...
— Across Unknown South America • Arnold Henry Savage Landor

... as these, which are very numerous, both in and out of print, convey an inadequate idea of his understanding; for there was really a great fund of good sense in him and in his political creed. Actor as he was, he was a very honest man, and had a hearty contempt for all the kinds of ...
— Famous Americans of Recent Times • James Parton

... pleasure and stimulant in her life. Existence would have been, so Sidney thought, a dreary, unbearable blank without it. She cast aside her milking-dress with a thrill of distaste that tingled to her rosy fingertips. As she slipped into her blue-print afternoon dress her aunt called to her from below. Sidney ran out to the dark little entry and leaned over the stair railing. Below in the kitchen there was a hubbub of laughing, crying, quarrelling children, and ...
— Lucy Maud Montgomery Short Stories, 1905 to 1906 • Lucy Maud Montgomery


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