Sentence examples for reprint from inspiring English sources

'reprint' is a valid and commonly used word in written English
It can be used when referring to the reprinting or reproduction of something, such as a book, magazine, or newspaper article. Example: The original version of the book was hard to find so the publisher decided to do a reprint.

Dictionary

reprint

noun

A book, pamphlet or other printed matter that has been published once before but is now being released again.

  • The reprint is much less expensive than a first edition.

Exact(60)

Let's use it as an excuse to reprint that great picture of her with David Bowie and Tilda Swinton last November.

Far from being the lecherous fat bloke whose photograph in fox-hunting kit the Daily Beast loves to reprint, he struck me as rather sensitive.

What with speculation about hung parliaments and possible party "pacts" after the election, publishers Faber & Faber have chosen a good moment to reprint The Pact by Alistair Michie and my much-missed late colleague, Simon Hoggart.

Most UK media did not reprint any of the satirical magazine's caricatures of Muhammad or the cartoons from Denmark's Jyllands-Posten, with which Charlie Hebdo first provoked international outrage in 2006.

And nowhere is that happening as fast as in the activity at the very core of banks' business: lending.Sources:"A Piece of the Action: When the Middle Class joined the Money Class", by Joe Nocera, Simon & Schuster, reprint edition 2013 .Smart Money", by Andrew Palmer, Basic Books, 2015.

In 2006 its decision to reprint inflammatory cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, first published in Denmark, was described by Jacques Chirac, then France's president, as a "manifest provocation".

XO Editions, Mr Sarkozy's publishers, says that, after an initial run of 130,000 copies, it has already had to reprint another 120,000.

(On February 8th, three editors and a reporter quit the New York Press over a decision not to reprint the cartoons, and President George Bush called on world governments to stop the violence and be "respectful").To be sure, the official French reaction has been measured.

Newspapers were ordered to reprint an editorial that was first published on January 7th by Global Times, an often-hardline Beijing daily.

Interestingly, this time the Danish political establishment uniformly affirmed the need to protect free expression, but Jyllands-Posten itself declined to reprint Charlie Hebdo's cartoons, citing security risks.

It has decided to "reprint" the 1972 constitution to reflect a landmark Supreme Court ruling in July which, among other things, declared null and void the rule of various military governments, including General Zia's, following the assassination in 1975 of Bangladesh's founding father, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.

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