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View synonyms for print

print

1

[ print ]

verb (used with object)

  1. to produce (a text, picture, etc.) 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.
  2. to reproduce (a design or pattern) by engraving on a plate or block.
  3. to form a design or pattern upon, as by stamping with an engraved plate or block:

    to print calico.

  4. to cause (a manuscript, text, etc.) to be published in print.
  5. to write in letters like those commonly used in print:

    Print your name on these forms.

  6. Computers. to produce (data) in legible alphanumeric or graphic form.
  7. to indent or mark by pressing something into or upon (something).
  8. to produce or fix (an indentation, mark, etc.), as by pressure.
  9. to impress on the mind, memory, etc.
  10. to apply (a thing) with pressure so as to leave an indentation, mark, etc.:

    The horses printed their hoofs on the wet grass.

  11. Photography. to produce a positive picture from (a negative) by the transmission of light.


verb (used without object)

  1. to take impressions from type, an engraved plate, etc., as in a press.
  2. to produce by means of a reproduction process:

    to print in color; to print unevenly.

  3. to make an image by means of ink, chemical action, etc., as type, engraved plates, etc.:

    This type is too worn to print cleanly.

  4. to write in characters such as are used in print:

    He'd rather print than use longhand.

  5. to follow the vocation of a printer.

noun

  1. the state of being printed.
  2. printed lettering, especially with reference to character, style, or size:

    This print is too large for footnotes.

  3. printed material.
  4. a printed publication, as a newspaper or magazine.
  5. a picture, design, or the like, printed from an engraved or otherwise prepared block, plate, etc.
  6. an indentation, mark, etc., made by the pressure of one body or thing on another.
  7. something with which an impression is made; a stamp or die.
  8. a fingerprint.
  9. Textiles.
    1. a design or pattern on cloth made by dyeing, weaving, or printing with engraved rollers, blocks of wood, stencils, etc.
    2. a cloth so treated.
    3. an article of apparel made of this cloth.
  10. something that has been subjected to impression, as a pat of butter.
  11. Photography. a picture, especially a positive made from a negative.
  12. any reproduced image, as a blueprint.
  13. Movies, Television. a positive copy of a completed film or filmed program ready for showing; release print.

adjective

  1. of, for, or comprising newspapers and magazines:

    print media.

verb phrase

  1. Photography. burn 1( def 47 ). Also burn in.
  2. Computers. to make a printout of.

print.

2

abbreviation for

  1. printing.

print

/ prɪnt /

verb

  1. to reproduce (text, pictures, etc), esp in large numbers, by applying ink to paper or other material by one of various processes
  2. to produce or reproduce (a manuscript, a book, data, etc) in print, as for publication
  3. to write (letters, etc) in the style of printed matter
  4. to mark or indent (a surface) by pressing (something) onto it
  5. to produce a photographic print from (a negative)
  6. tr to implant or fix in the mind or memory
  7. tr to make (a mark or indentation) by applying pressure
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


noun

  1. printed matter such as newsprint
  2. a printed publication such as a newspaper or book
  3. in print
    1. in printed or published form
    2. (of a book, etc) offered for sale by the publisher
  4. out of print
    no longer available from a publisher
  5. a design or picture printed from an engraved plate, wood block, or other medium
  6. printed text, esp with regard to the typeface used

    small print

  7. a positive photographic image in colour or black and white produced, usually on paper, from a negative image on film Compare slide
    1. a fabric with a printed design
    2. ( as modifier )

      a print dress

    1. a mark or indentation made by pressing something onto a surface
    2. a stamp, die, etc, that makes such an impression
    3. the surface subjected to such an impression
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Other Words From

  • un·printed adjective
  • well-printed adjective
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Word History and Origins

Origin of print1

1250–1300; (noun) Middle English prent ( e ), print ( e ), prient ( e ) < Old French priente impression, print, noun use of feminine past participle of preindre to press 1 < Latin premere; (v.) Middle English prenten, derivative of the noun
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Word History and Origins

Origin of print1

C13 priente, from Old French: something printed, from preindre to make an impression, from Latin premere to press
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Idioms and Phrases

Idioms
  1. in print,
    1. in printed form; published.
    2. (of a book or the like) still available for purchase from the publisher.
  2. out of print, (of a book or the like) no longer available for purchase from the publisher.

More idioms and phrases containing print

In addition to the idiom beginning with print , also see go out (of print) ; in print ; small print .
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Example Sentences

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.

From Digiday

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.

From Fortune

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.

From Digiday

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.

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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

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