26 Metaphors for printing

A print of Mr. Gray will be a real present.

The sensitised plate will now have had its total exposure of eighty seconds; it is then developed, and the print taken from it is the generalised picture of which I speak.

It does not reproduce the finger-tip, but a particular print of the finger, and so, if ten prints are made with a single stamp, each print will be a mechanical repetition of the other nine.

Those foot-prints of long ago, combined with the peculiarities which will ever dwell with these children of the sea, are attractions which insure to the stranger on his first visit, visions of many a happy hour in the future; and he will long for the season to return which shall liberate so many of the city doomed artificials to a few weeks' intercourse with nature.

" "But you have stated, quite positively, that the thumb-print on this paper is a forgery.

Juncker's book is a very good repertory of the various representations of the great reformer, but the prints are generally but faithless copies.

A finger-print is merely a facta very important and significant one, I admitbut still a fact, which, like any other fact, requires to be weighed and measured with reference to its evidential value.

Finding that he was still thirsty he came back for another drink, because the second prints are a little distance from the first.

Probably the two motives which have inspired Germanyofficial and unofficialto print many volumes on Belgian neutrality have been the indignation aroused in neutral countries and the fact that a complete German victory was not obtained in three months of war.

Hence we have the striking fact that the red thumb-print is an exact replicaincluding accidental peculiaritiesof the only print from which a forgery could have been made.

They found here, however, the tokens of fishermen who had fled, leaving behind them some of their fishing tackle; and they noticed the prints of the feet of beasts, which they judged might have been goats, and they saw the bones of one, the head of which had no horns, and which, therefore, they thought might have been a monkey, or cat-o-mountain, as they afterwards found it to have been, having found many of these cats in Paria.

" "Not at all," rejoined Thorndyke; "the finger-print is a most valuable clue as long as its evidential value is not exaggerated.

The prints toned by this bath are, in our opinion, the finest of the whole.

These prints were veritable treasures of learning.

The conclusion is thus inevitable that the red thumb-print is a photo-mechanical reproduction of the 'Thumbograph' print.

I need not follow the case further, since the details will appear in the evidence, but I may tell you that, in effect, it has been made clear, beyond all doubt, that the thumb-print on that paper was the thumb-print of the prisoner, Reuben Hornby.

The forged print is not an absolute facsimile of the true print.

The time may come when even the cheap public print shall be a burden our means cannot support, and we can only listen in the square that was once the market-place to the voices of those who proclaim defeat or victory.

Having introduced computers ahead of the NT, its printing was neater but the paper was replete with errors typographical as well as factual.

For several days after that little party blue-printing in the Robinson-Ray office was a lost art.

His recognition of the importance of printing is given in these words: "Printing is the best and highest gift, the summum et postremum donum by which God advanceth the Gospel.

Dunton proceeds: 'Printing was now the uppermost in my thoughts, and hackney authors began to ply me with specimens as earnestly and with as much passion and concern as the watermen do passengers with Oars and Scullers.

Printing is a business attended with so little profit here, as there are already so many workmen, that it is almost useless for a stranger to apply.

Your printing this Letter may perhaps be an Admonition to reform him: As soon as it appears I will write my Name at the End of it, and lay it in his Way; the making which just Reprimand, I hope you will put in the Power of, SIR, Your constant Reader, and humble Servant.

The mere printing of such words in italics is an active force towards degeneration.

26 Metaphors for  printing