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reprinting
noun
A reprint.
Exact(59)
In his blog, Drummond wrote of his support for two journalists based in Phuket, Alan Morison and Chutima Sidasathian, who are facing criminal defamation charges brought by the Thai navy for reprinting a Reuters report that alleged complicity in human trafficking by naval officers.
You chose to omit this caption when reprinting the cartoon.
The government is having to spend hundreds of millions of dollars reprinting English publications, road signs and maps.
In 2007 Charlie's editor had been hauled into court for reprinting cartoons of Muhammad from a Danish magazine.
The present governor of Arkansas, Mike Huckabee, the mayor of Little Rock, Jim Dailey, and other local politicians all declared that the people of Arkansas had learned from their mistakes.The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette is reprinting its 1957 front pages every day for three weeks.
Doc experienced a resurgence of popularity in 1964, when Bantam Books began reprinting all the original stories as paperbacks, though a number of these were abridged.
Slow motion can be created by reprinting each frame two or three times.
Great libraries were created, rare texts were reprinted, and compilation projects proliferated, culminating in the great government-sponsored Siku quanshu (1772 82), which undertook to collect for reprinting the best editions of the most important books produced in China, using as selection criteria the methods of the empirical school.
Apocryphal, perhaps, but well worth reprinting: "I remember doing a signing at a book shop in London," the author tells Shortlist, "and a young man told me he loved what I'd written [in Fight Club] about waiters doing things to celebrities' food.
When he discovered that right-wing publishers were reprinting the book themselves, he sued for copyright infringement.
Similar(1)
A printed edition appeared in the late fifteenth century that was reprinted an incredible 11 times before its 'definitive' reprinting in Luke Wadding's 1639 edition of the complete works of Duns Scotus.[6] Thomas of Erfurt belonged to an interesting though somewhat obscure group of late thirteenth- and early fourteenth-century philosophers known as the speculative grammarians or Modistae.
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