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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a reprint" is correct and commonly used in written English.
It refers to a reproduction or copy of a previously published material, such as a book, article, or photograph. Example: The library had a rare collection of Shakespeare's original works, as well as several reprints for students to borrow.
Exact(58)
A reprint edition is now available.
Actually a reprint, but re-issued this year".
And a reprint is available from Swedenborg Press).
Now that really is scary, and well worth a reprint.
The book is a reprint, which was based off newspaper pages from the 1900s.
A naval seaman marries a woman he accidentally made pregnant; a reprint from the "Navy" series.
It was a reprint of one that appeared with the column on Feb. 20.
Its publisher, Harvill Secker, has since rushed through a reprint of Joanna Kilmartin's 2000 translation.
The book, which is a reprint of one published in 1987, has an odd premise.
But as Robert Wexler, a Democratic congressman, likes to point out, "a reprint is not a recount".
A reprint of the Kitchen's press release, with Eric Bogosian as the press contact, adds a bit of historical perspective.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com