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Impression   /ɪmprˈɛʃən/   Listen
noun
Impression  n.  
1.
The act of impressing, or the state of being impressed; the communication of a stamp, mold, style, or character, by external force or by influence.
2.
That which is impressed; stamp; mark; indentation; sensible result of an influence exerted from without. "The stamp and clear impression of good sense." "To shelter us from impressions of weather, we must spin, we must weave, we must build."
3.
That which impresses, or exercises an effect, action, or agency; appearance; phenomenon. (Obs.) "Portentous blaze of comets and impressions in the air." "A fiery impression falling from out of Heaven."
4.
Influence or effect on the senses or the intellect hence, interest, concern. "His words impression left." "Such terrible impression made the dream." "I have a father's dear impression, And wish, before I fall into my grave, That I might see her married."
5.
An indistinct notion, remembrance, or belief.
6.
Impressiveness; emphasis of delivery. "Which must be read with an impression."
7.
(Print.) The pressure of the type on the paper, or the result of such pressure, as regards its appearance; as, a heavy impression; a clear, or a poor, impression; also, a single copy as the result of printing, or the whole edition printed at a given time; as, a copy from the fifth impression. "Ten impressions which his books have had."
8.
In painting, the first coat of color, as the priming in house painting and the like. (R.)
9.
(Engraving) A print on paper from a wood block, metal plate, or the like.
Proof impression, one of the early impressions taken from an engraving, before the plate or block is worn.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Impression" Quotes from Famous Books



... words, I admit, which being young and inexperienced I spoke in my British pride, I could see made a great impression upon my judges. They believed, to be fair to them, that they had passed a just sentence. Blinded by prejudice and falsehood, and maddened by the dreadful losses their people had suffered during the past few ...
— Marie - An Episode in The Life of the late Allan Quatermain • H. Rider Haggard

... called At At by the natives. The only quadrupeds are rats, and some huge land tortoises, similar to those of the Galapagos Islands. They are most hideous-looking creatures, and, being of nocturnal habits, like the great robber crab, are apt to produce a most terrifying impression upon the beholder, if met with in the loneliness of the night. The present human occupants of Christmas Island are, however, well supplied with pigs and poultry; and though this far-away dot of Britain's empire beyond the seas is scarcely known to the world, and visited but twice a ...
— Ridan The Devil And Other Stories - 1899 • Louis Becke

... doubtful, shows that thought transfer is to the ear as well as to the eye, or at least goes over from one to the other; she says, "You know I as often hear the name of the object as see the thing itself." This may have been from a mental effort to receive distinctly an inefficiently acute impression of her friend's. She saw a jug seen by her friend, and heard the train she heard. The colour of the jug differed a little. The distance fourteen miles. Audible speech might thus be helped by despatching a picture of the idea from a distance. ...
— Inferences from Haunted Houses and Haunted Men • John Harris

... His recollections were of a young man of about his own age, about his own height and build, somewhat above the medium; it was his impression, he said, that the man was dressed, if not shabbily, at least poorly; he had an impression, too, that the clean-shaven face which he had seen for a brief moment was thin ...
— The Middle of Things • J. S. Fletcher

... LXV, 36, with the symbol of the day Ahau, shown in LXVIII, 5, leads at once to the impression that the former was derived from the latter, and that, if in any sense phonetic, the equivalents of the two are closely related. As will be shown hereafter, the Ahau symbol has l as its chief phonetic element, if it be considered ...
— Day Symbols of the Maya Year • Cyrus Thomas


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