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print

/print/US // prɪnt //UK // (prɪnt) //

印刷品,打印,印刷,打印出来的

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to produce by applying inked types, plates, blocks, or the like, to paper or other material either by direct pressure or indirectly by offsetting an image onto an intermediate roller.
    • : to reproduce by engraving on a plate or block.
    • : to form a design or pattern upon, as by stamping with an engraved plate or block: to print calico.
    • : to cause to be published in print.
    • : to write in letters like those commonly used in print: Print your name on these forms.
    • : Computers. to produce in legible alphanumeric or graphic form.
    • : to indent or mark by pressing something into or upon.
    • : to produce or fix, as by pressure.
    • : to impress on the mind, memory, etc.
    • : to fingerprint.
    • : to apply with pressure so as to leave an indentation, mark, etc.: The horses printed their hoofs on the wet grass.
    • : Photography. to produce a positive picture from by the transmission of light.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to take impressions from type, an engraved plate, etc., as in a press.
    • : to produce by means of a reproduction process: to print in color; to print unevenly.
    • : to make an image by means of ink, chemical action, etc., as type, engraved plates, etc.: This type is too worn to print cleanly.
    • : to write in characters such as are used in print: He'd rather print than use longhand.
    • : to follow the vocation of a printer.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the state of being printed.
    • : printed lettering, especially with reference to character, style, or size: This print is too large for footnotes.
    • : printed material.
    • : a printed publication, as a newspaper or magazine.
    • : newsprint.
    • : a picture, design, or the like, printed from an engraved or otherwise prepared block, plate, etc.
    • : an indentation, mark, etc., made by the pressure of one body or thing on another.
    • : something with which an impression is made; a stamp or die.
    • : a fingerprint.
    • : Textiles. a design or pattern on cloth made by dyeing, weaving, or printing with engraved rollers, blocks of wood, stencils, etc.a cloth so treated.an article of apparel made of this cloth.
    • : something that has been subjected to impression, as a pat of butter.
    • : Photography. a picture, especially a positive made from a negative.
    • : any reproduced image, as a blueprint.
    • : Movies, Television. a positive copy of a completed film or filmed program ready for showing; release print.
adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : of, for, or comprising newspapers and magazines: print media.
  1. 1
    • : print in, Photography. burn. Also burn in .
    • : print out, Computers. to make a printout of.

Phrases

  • print out
  • go out (of print)
  • in print
  • small print

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • We’ve proven ourselves — all the numbers show we’re now bigger than TV and print combined — now it’s time to figure out what eggs we broke getting there.

  • Those changes still stand to slow down the mail, including the delivery of Media Mail, as many packages of books and disc-based content are typically slim enough to be slipped into mailboxes quite easily with postage printed at home or at work.

  • Mighty Buildings’ homes are different from those of its 3D-printed-house peers in two ways.

  • Shops like SubRosa and Omelet have previously ventured into magazine publishing with a bi-annual print magazine, La Petit Mort and a quarterly glossy, Wake Up, respectively.

  • At 400 square meters in size and 2 stories tall, the house took 45 days to print—and at the time, this seemed amazingly fast.

  • They took cover inside a print works to the north east of Paris, where they held a member of staff as a hostage.

  • It also required that ads print a disclaimer if they digitally altered the models.

  • In “Sleigh Ride,” the narrator is painting a scene so perfect that it could be featured on an iconic Currier and Ives print.

  • Scrooge is still with us, not just in print but embodied in the cold hearts and selfish calculations of misanthropes everywhere.

  • Esther Choi of Mokbar said she has made Korean potato pancakes called gam ja jun, and Charles Rodriguez of PRINT.

  • This new nexus of print has grown up in the lifetime of four or five generations, and it is undergoing constant changes.

  • The print of steel-rimmed hoofs showed in the soft loam as plainly as a moccasin-track in virgin snow.

  • In a niche in the mud wall was a cheap print of the Madonna, one candle just smouldering out before it.

  • He had no rest until the seals were fixed to parchment, and the warrant of his release appeared in public print.

  • Transcribers Notes: This ebook has been transcribed from the original print edition, published in 1767.