mimeograph

[ US /ˈmɪmiəˌɡɹæf/ ]
NOUN
  1. a rotary duplicator that uses a stencil through which ink is pressed (trade mark Roneo)
VERB
  1. print copies from (a prepared stencil) using a mimeograph
    She mimeographed the syllabus
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How To Use mimeograph In A Sentence

  • I mimeographed the following Whalen poem (which I had from a letter he sent me) and passed it around.
  • There were 6,000 other prisoners in the camp, and the nurses used an old mimeograph machine to start a public health campaign on the dangers of disease.
  • The people disagreeing would be staying up all night at the Kinkos in Columbus, Indiana, sending a mimeographed newsletter to the handful of other right wing cranks they knew.
  • For a decade now, former major-label hype guy Alfonso's been printing up Ralph, a free, deliciously mimeographed zine of his Beat-inspired poetry which would find its way across Canada.
  • In late September 1961, she called everyone she knew and then started sending mimeographed copies of a call to strike on Nov. 1. Dagmar Wilson, founder of women's peace group, dies at 94
  • The mother did not ask her about school and did not look up when she pushed the mimeograph worksheets under her nose, did not react as she repeated something the teacher said. Still Life, With Girl
  • That night Jo Ann Robinson, a professor at the all-black Alabama State College, and a member of the Women's Political Council went with friends to her college and mimeographed leaflets calling for a boycott of the buses.
  • In several of his courses, Fermi handed out mimeographed notes before each lecture.
  • Judy Grahn starts a mimeograph press in Oakland that becomes the Women's Press Collective.
  • She mimeographed the syllabus
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