pronunciation
How to pronounce print in British English: UK [prɪnt]
How to pronounce print in American English: US [prɪnt]
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- Noun:
- the result of the printing process
- a picture or design printed from an engraving
- a visible indication made on a surface
- a copy of a movie on film (especially a particular version of it)
- a fabric with a dyed pattern pressed onto it (usually by engraved rollers)
- a printed picture produced from a photographic negative
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- Verb:
- put into print
- write as if with print; not cursive
- make into a print
- reproduce by printing
Word Origin
- print: [13] Latin premere meant ‘press’ (its past participial stem press- underlies English press). It passed into Old French as preindre, whose past participle formed the basis of a noun preinte ‘impression, impressed mark’ – source of English print. The verb first used for the activity of ‘printing books’ was the derived imprint [14] (‘Because this said book is full of wholesome wisdom … I have purposed to imprint it’, William Caxton, Game and Play of the Chess 1474), but print soon followed at the beginning of the 16th century.=> press
- print (n.)
- c. 1300, "impression, mark" (as by a stamp or seal), from Old French preinte "impression," noun use of fem. past participle of preindre "to press, crush," altered from prembre, from Latin premere "to press" (see press (v.1)). The Old French word also was borrowed into Middle Dutch (prente, Dutch prent) and other Germanic languages. Meaning "printed lettering" is from 1620s; print-hand "print-like handwriting" is from 1658. Sense of "picture or design from a block or plate" is first attested 1660s. Meaning "piece of printed cloth" is from 1756. In Middle English, stigmata were called precious prentes of crist; to perceiven the print of sight was "to feel (someone's) gaze." Out of print "no longer to be had from the publisher" is from 1670s (to be in print is recorded from late 15c.). Print journalism attested from 1962.
- print (v.)
- mid-14c., prenten "to make an impression" (as with a seal, stamp, etc.), from print (n.). Meaning "to set a mark on any surface" (including by writing) is attested from late 14c. Meaning "to run off on a press" is recorded from 1510s (Caxton, 1474, used enprynte in this sense). In reference to textiles, 1580s. The photography sense is recorded from 1851 (the noun in this sense is from 1853). Meaning "to write in imitation of typography" is from 1801. He always prints, I know, 'cos he learnt writin' from the large bills in the bookin' offices. [Charles Dickens, "Pickwick Papers," 1837] The meaning "to record (someone's) fingerprints" is from 1952. Related: Printed; printing.
Example
- 1. They disclosed it all in the prospectus , albeit in fine print .
- 2. Print , that 's a really good technology it might start replacing the internet . ' "
- 3. Things looked promising when online specialty print maker cafepress ( prss ) went public in march .
- 4. Still , it 's sad to witness the demise of the print edition .
- 5. Find out if they have either an online or print database of internships .