[
US
/ɹiˈpɹɪnt/
]
NOUN
- a separately printed article that originally appeared in a larger publication
- a publication (such as a book) that is reprinted without changes or editing and offered again for sale
VERB
-
print anew
They never reprinted the famous treatise
How To Use reprint In A Sentence
- April 1974 Penguin reprint with a cover design by David Pelham. Ballardian » Landscapes From a Dream: How the Art of David Pelham Captured the Essence of J G Ballard’s Early Fiction
- And indeed they were: the book was reprinted ten times in nine months. The Times Literary Supplement
- The following story is reprinted from Dakota Dirt, a newsletter published by South Dakota State University Soil Testing Lab.
- Published in 1918, the book was a sensationally fast seller and had to be reprinted six times within the year.
- Before machine-readable, full-text e-prints were available, paper preprints were mailed by the author or the institution only to major institutions.
- Council was incorporated by Labbe and Cossart in their collection of the Acts of councils; that of the works of St. John Climacus, published in 1614, was reprinted by Migne in his Greek patrology The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 12: Philip II-Reuss
- Some company will have been paid an enormous sum, they will spend thousands more reprinting notepaper and convincing us it's a good idea.
- Dreadstar Vol. 1 TPB - This reprint of Jim Starlin's 80's ouvre collects the first few issues of the series (and not the Metamorphosis Odyssey that resulted in galactic genocide) that persuaded me that scifi wasn't so bad. Grafictive excesses
- Bouvet was happy to oblige, and the Portrait historique was reprinted in the 1699 edition.
- It goes without saying that more than a few of these works have been reprinted in anthologies such as Jonathan Strahan's The Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the Year and several editions of Gardner Dozois's The Year's Best Science Fiction. August 2009