释义 |
[ verb ree-print; noun ree-print ] / verb riˈprɪnt; noun ˈriˌprɪnt / SEE SYNONYMS FOR reprint ON THESAURUS.COM
verb (used with object)to print again; print a new impression of. nouna reproduction in print of matter already printed. an offprint. a new impression, without alteration, of a book or other printed work. Philately. an impression from the original plate after the issuance of a stamp has ceased and its use for postage has been voided. Origin of reprintFirst recorded in 1545–55; re- + print OTHER WORDS FROM reprintre·print·er, nounmis·re·print, verb (used with object)un·re·print·ed, adjectiveWords nearby reprintrepressor, repressor gene, reprieval, reprieve, reprimand, reprint, reprisal, reprise, repristinate, reprivatize, repro Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for reprintJoe was gracious enough to give his permission to let us reprint it here. The Stacks: Robin Williams, More Than A Shtick Figure|Joe Morgenstern|August 16, 2014|DAILY BEAST By Christmas it was on its seventh reprint and had sold more than 150,000 copies. Will Jargon Be the Death of the English Language?|The Telegraph|March 30, 2014|DAILY BEAST The Prince By R.M. Koster A reprint of a 1972 classic in which a fictional Latin American nation boils in violence. This Week’s Hot Reads: March 25, 2013|Nicholas Mancusi|March 25, 2013|DAILY BEAST The Royalist would like to thank Powells for permission to reprint this piece. Working in The Royal Archives and Dreaming Up a Novel|Tom Sykes|October 16, 2012|DAILY BEAST
She is reviewing a posthumous book by Tony Tanner, a reprint of the prefaces he wrote for The Everyman Shakespeare in the 1990s. The Best of Brit Lit|Peter Stothard|May 15, 2011|DAILY BEAST Before graduating, he edited a reprint of John Burton's Pentalogia. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 4|Various The only existing edition of these diatribes is one in 1687; but, from their date and import, this may have been a reprint. The Works of John Dryden. Now first collected in eighteen volumes. Volume 15.|John Dryden A reprint of some of Dr Phaers remedies and preservatives, without date, is conjecturally assigned to the year 1601. A History of Epidemics in Britain (Volume I of II)|Charles Creighton The reprint will contain the whole of Hakluyt, with the addition of several scarce voyages and travels. Bibliomania; or Book-Madness|Thomas Frognall Dibdin We reprint the memorial, quite confident that it will not suffer by comparison with what has appeared from the other side. The Friars in the Philippines|Ambrose Coleman
British Dictionary definitions for reprint
noun (ˈriːˌprɪnt)a reproduction in print of any matter already published; offprint a reissue of a printed work using the same type, plates, etc, as the original Derived forms of reprintreprinter, nounCollins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012 Words related to reprinttranslation, manuscript, transcription, essay, album, novel, publication, dictionary, pamphlet, text, work, manual, textbook, fiction, volume, edition, magazine, booklet, brochure, writing |