printing
Kelime Anlamı :
1. matbaacılık.
2. baskı.
3. tab.
4. tab etme.
5. emprime.
6. basma.
7. şekil.
8. matbaa harfleriyle yazma.
9. baskı sayısı.
10. baskı boyası.
Sahne Örnekleri :
Eş Anlamlı Kelimeler :
Tanımlar :
1.
the art, process, or business of producing printed material by means of inked type and a printing press or by similar means.
2. the act of one that prints.
3. matter that is printed.
4. all the copies of a publication, such as a book, that are printed at one time.
5. written characters not connected to one another and resembling those appearing in print.
2. the act of one that prints.
3. matter that is printed.
4. all the copies of a publication, such as a book, that are printed at one time.
5. written characters not connected to one another and resembling those appearing in print.
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
1.
the process or business of producing printed material by means of inked type and a printing press or similar technology.
2. material that has been printed.
3. all the copies of a publication that have been printed in one batch.
4. written characters that are not joined up.
5. present participle of print.
2. material that has been printed.
3. all the copies of a publication that have been printed in one batch.
4. written characters that are not joined up.
5. present participle of print.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
1.
the act, art, or practice of impressing letters, characters, or figures on paper, cloth, or other material; the business of a printer, including typesetting and presswork, with their adjuncts; typography; also, the act of producing photographic prints.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English
1.
in general, the art or process of making copies or superficial transfers by impression; the reproduction of designs, characters, etc., on an impressible surface by means of an ink or a pigment (generally oily) applied to the solid surface on which they are engraved or otherwise formed.
2. the art or process of producing printed matter for reading (including illustrations, etc.) by composition and imposition of types, and their subjection when inked to pressure upon paper in a printing-press; the typographic art; typography in the fullest sense.
3. in photography, the act or art of obtaining a positive photographic picture from a negative, or a picture in which the lights and shades are true to nature from one in which they are reversed. when based upon the properties of a salt of silver, such printing is called silver-printing, and similarly with other salts.
4. in ceramics, the art of decorating pottery by means of transfers, either by paper printed with mineral colors or by sheets of gelatin printed in oil.
5. advertising-bills, posters, dodgers, window-bills, and the like.
2. the art or process of producing printed matter for reading (including illustrations, etc.) by composition and imposition of types, and their subjection when inked to pressure upon paper in a printing-press; the typographic art; typography in the fullest sense.
3. in photography, the act or art of obtaining a positive photographic picture from a negative, or a picture in which the lights and shades are true to nature from one in which they are reversed. when based upon the properties of a salt of silver, such printing is called silver-printing, and similarly with other salts.
4. in ceramics, the art of decorating pottery by means of transfers, either by paper printed with mineral colors or by sheets of gelatin printed in oil.
5. advertising-bills, posters, dodgers, window-bills, and the like.
from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
1.
reproduction by applying ink to paper as for publication
2. all the copies of a work printed at one time
3. the business of producing printed material for sale or distribution
4. text handwritten in the style of printed matter
2. all the copies of a work printed at one time
3. the business of producing printed material for sale or distribution
4. text handwritten in the style of printed matter
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.