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单词 reprint
释义

reprintn.

Brit. /ˈriːprɪnt/, U.S. /ˈriˌprɪnt/
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: reprint v.
Etymology: < reprint v.
1. An act of printing further copies of a work; (also) a new impression of a work previously printed, without alteration of the material; spec. a reissue from the same type or plates of a work previously printed.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > printing > printed matter > [noun] > reprint
reprint1611
reimpression1787
transprint1827
tirage1873
1611 J. Florio Queen Anna's New World of Words Ristampa, a reprint, a reprinting.
1697 T. Crisp Just & Lawful Tryal Foxonian Chief Priests 4 I say as to their Reprints or new Editions, they are not to be believed nor trusted.
1770 C. Chauncy Reply Dr. Chandler's ‘Appeal Defended’ 21 (note) Whether it was one of the first printed copies, or a reprint from one of these, I cannot say.
1822 Moule Bibl. Heraldica 11 Mr. Haslewood paid seven guineas for a copy..to assist him in the reprint.
1841 W. Spalding Italy & Ital. Islands III. 198 He had just been made aware of a Milanese reprint of his book.
1883 Law Times 20 Oct. 425/2 The second edition is not, however, a simple reprint of the first.
1927 Amazing Stories Dec. 909/2 I believe your best stories have been reprints from Wells, Verne, Serviss and Burroughs, although the latter's work hardly belongs in your magazine.
1954 A. H. Gardiner Theory of Proper Names (ed. 2) p. v The bulk of this book is an exact reprint of a..booklet published..in 1940.
2002 S. Fuller Third Face ix. 78 It got one printing run... That was that, no reprints or backlisting.
2. Typography. Printed matter used as copy to be set up and printed again. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > printing > printed matter > [noun] > print used as copy
reprint1824
1824 J. Johnson Typographia II. xviii. 578 Without making any distinction between manuscript and reprint.
1866 Rep. from Commissioners: Children's Employment in Parl. Papers XIV. 20/1 The difference is that in the store room you are on reprint, and in the other on MS., the work of setting up the type is just the same.
1888 Cent. Mag. Dec. 303/1 ‘How are ye off for copy, Mike?’ ‘Bad,’ answered the old printer, ‘I've a little reprint, but no original matter at all.’
1904 T. L. De Vinne Mod. Methods Bk. Composition. vi. 231 Reprint or clear manuscript copy in Latin, French..or in any other language that uses the roman character, can be decently rendered in type by a careful compositor.
1950 Stud. in Bibliogr. 3 50 Instead of chopping the reprint up into two sections to be set and printed simultaneously, they set the book seriatim but working in relay.

Compounds

General attributive and appositive.
ΚΠ
1864 B. Quaritch Catal. Bks. 59 A facsimile reprint edition appeared about 1810.
1907 W. S. Booth Pract. Guide for Authors 141 For works in the French language,..the English compositor generally gets reprint copy for the text and MS. for the notes.
1928 Publishers' Weekly 30 June 2603 Reprint fiction began to appear in cloth binding.
1951 A. C. Clarke Sands of Mars xi. 135 She immediately sold the second reprint rights of Gibson's latest series.
1981 J. Sutherland Bestsellers i. 14 The [American] bookclubs..have in the past been much less reprint affairs than in the UK.
2000 J. A. Fogel tr. W. Masuda Japan & China xv. 85 There is another Japanese reprint work in three stringbound volumes.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2009; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

reprintv.

Brit. /ˌriːˈprɪnt/, U.S. /riˈprɪnt/
Forms: see re- prefix and print v.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: re- prefix, print v.
Etymology: < re- prefix + print v.
1.
a. transitive. To print a new impression of (a work); to print (material) a second or further time, without alteration. Also intransitive.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > printing > [verb (transitive)] > reprint
reprint1551
reimprint1611
offprint1895
society > communication > printing > [verb (intransitive)] > reprint
reprint1934
1551 in N. Udall Ralph Roister Doister (1847) Introd. p. xxx To preynt, repreynt, utter, and sell, that the worke of Peter Marter.
1605 E. Sandys Relation State of Relig. sig. Nv To reprint them in their first intirenesse.
1624 T. Gataker Discuss. Transubstant. 38 I hope when this Bishop of Flanders booke cometh to be reprinted againe [etc.].
1676 J. Ray Corr. (1848) 123 I have been lately solicited to reprint my Catalogue of English Plants.
1712 T. Hearne Remarks & Coll. (1889) III. 479 He is reprinting your Letter to Sr. Chr. Wren.
1752 G. Berkeley Farther Thoughts Tar-water in Miscell. 15 Accounts of the Effects of Tar-Water were reprinted in America.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. II. vii. 176 His History of his own Times, his History of the Reformation,..are still reprinted.
1891 Law Rep.: Weekly Notes 7 Mar. 44/1 It was his practice to reprint from time to time articles which had previously appeared in his newspaper.
1934 H. G. Wells Exper. in Autobiogr. II. ix. 646 Macmillan's..were caught unawares by the demand and had sold out the first edition before they reprinted.
1971 G. Brown In my Way xi. 219 Peggy Herbison moved that the Party should accept Mr Cousins's kind offer to reprint and circulate the Gaitskell speech.
2004 Tool & Machinery Catal. 2005 (Axminster Power Tool Centre Ltd.) xvii. 4/3 Out of print for nearly 60 years, this great work has been reprinted.
b. transitive. To print (material) again with revisions; to print a new version of (a work).
ΚΠ
?1570 tr. Shepardes Kalendar (rev. ed.) sig. A ii Thys boke (gentle reader) was fyrst corruptly printed in Fraunce and after that at the cost and charges of Rycharde Pynson, newly translated and reprinted.
1599 F. Thynne Animaduersions (1875) 75 Leysure to reprinte, correcte, and comente the same.
1643 W. Prynne Soveraigne Power Parl. To Rdr. sig. A2 To enlarge the first Part of this Discourse, with sundry pertinent Additions, and to Re-print it in a greater Character, then before.
1693 N. Luttrell Diary in Brief Hist. Relation State Affairs (1857) III. 139 The Gazet was printing with the Satturday's account, but this relation being brought on Sunday, it was wholly reprinted.
1712 R. Cotes Let. 26 Apr. in I. Newton Corr. (1975) V. 279 Your Treatise of ye Cubick Curves should be reprinted, for I think ye Enumeration is imperfect, there being as I reckon five cases of Æquations.
1761 J. Wesley Let. 26 Dec. (1931) IV. 166 I am hugely displeased at his reprinting the Nativity hymns and omitting the very best hymn in the collection.
1800 Monthly Mag. 8 878 If..the English Universal History should..be reprinted,..improvements may be derived from the German refaccimento of that work.
1865 S. J. Hunter & G. W. Lawrance Elem. View Proc. in Suit in Equity (ed. 3) iv. 56 If the amendments introduced into the bill in any one place exceed two folios, or one hundred and eighty words, it is necessary to reprint the bill as amended.
1931 Amer. Mercury Feb. p. xxix, (advt.) Dr. Logan Clendening's The Human Body..has just been reprinted in a popular, revised edition at $2.50.
1946 E. B. White Writings from New Yorker (1990) 36 We reprint it in free translation, with pride and embarrassment.
1995 S. E. Grace in M. Lowry Sursum Corda! I. 90 This story was reprinted in revised form as ‘Seductio ad Absurdum’, and was later rewritten and incorporated into chapter 4 of Ultramarine.
c. intransitive. Of a work: to undergo reprinting. Usually in present participle.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > printing > [verb (intransitive)] > be reprinted in new edition
reprint1616
1616 in H. Spelman De non temerandis Ecclesiis sig. A2 Being hitherto by me suppressed from reprinting here at home; I find it to bee of late time printed in Scotland.
1659 Catal. Bks. in H. Hammond Paraph. & Annot. New Test. (ed. 2) (end matter) Lately printed in 4. and now reprinting in fol. with large Additions.
1706 in L. Beaulieu Reciprocal Duty betwixt Kings & Subj. 23 There is now Reprinting the Third Edition of Dr. Mason's Sermon, and will be published about the 18th or 20th October.
1821 R. Southey Let. 11 Jan. in Notes & Queries (1975) Sept. 402/1 Do not bind your set, till I send you some corrections and additions for the first volume, which is now reprinting.
1857 Gentleman's Mag. Feb. 149 In our preface written at the close of that memorable year, we had to announce that the Magazine for October was reprinting.
1942 World Rev. Apr. 17 In this war he is a Home Guard officer and the author of four training manuals, which, despite the paper shortage, reprint every few months.
1967 Listener 12 Jan. 68/3 It will be for these [colour photographs] that Slowly Down the Ganges has to reprint.
1980 Daily Tel. 21 Aug. 14 The book has sold 10,000 copies since May. It is now reprinting.
2005 R. J. Prytherch Harrod's Librarians' Gloss. (ed. 10) 610 R.P...indicates that a book is not available from the publisher but is ‘reprinting’. If RP is followed by a date as ‘RP Jan.’ it indicates when a reprint will be ready.
2. transitive. To imprint or stamp again. Also in figurative context. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > existence > intrinsicality or inherence > character or nature > impart a character or nature to [verb (transitive)] > stamp a character upon > again
reprint1605
reimprint1611
reimpress1667
restampa1711
1605 J. Sylvester tr. G. de S. Du Bartas Deuine Weekes & Wks. ii. ii. 482 Because then South-ward Sol doth retro-grade, Goes (Crab-like) backward, and so neuer stinteth, But still his wheeles in the same track reprinteth.
1663 R. South Serm. preached Nov. 9, 1662 38 To rub over the defaced copy of the Creation, to re-print Gods Image upon the Soul.
1683 J. Moxon Mech. Exercises II. 341 The hindside of the Plattin by the Second Pull reprints part of the First Pull.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2009; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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