[ US /ˈbɫuˌpɹɪnt/ ]
[ UK /blˈuːpɹɪnt/ ]
NOUN
  1. photographic print of plans or technical drawings etc.
  2. something intended as a guide for making something else
    a pattern for a skirt
    a blueprint for a house
VERB
  1. make a blueprint of
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How To Use blueprint In A Sentence

  • The third form of B vitamin useful to crystalline biology is not found in foods as much as produced by new glands in the ascending genetic blueprint.
  • It is unlikely that their blueprint for economic reform will be put into action.
  • Ministers will be given powers to remove weak heads swiftly if they are unable to provide a blueprint for improvement. The Sun
  • Donnelly's PNAC report -- a blueprint followed faithfully by the Bush Administration -- openly yearned for a "new Pearl Harbor" that would "catalyze" the American people into adopting PNAC's global militarist agenda wholesale. Undefined
  • No one amends lightly something as vital as a blueprint.
  • This would be the blueprint for all schooling: I'd promote anti-racism and religious tolerance so pupils knew what it was.
  • It comes down in favour of a blueprint that for sound political and environmental reasons will prove impossible to realise. Times, Sunday Times
  • Calis had literally rebuilt the old battlewagon from the ground up, using what he had in the junkyard and blueprints that he had acquired some time ago.
  • September 13th, 2009 at 5: 05 am computerist: This irrelevance blows UCD through the roof simply from the fact that these organisms are each carriers of prescribed "blueprint" information slowly but surely waiting for their next "release" state. Behe, Common Descent, & UD
  • Nigerian starlet Justice Christopher could be the next player to win a place in Kevin Keegan's Maine Road blueprint.
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