Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

119 Sentences With "have printed"

How to use have printed in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "have printed" and check conjugation/comparative form for "have printed". Mastering all the usages of "have printed" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Ok, so we *may* have printed 17,000 bags with a typo.
Investment-grade corporates have printed over €10bn so far this week.
I have printed a lot of personal documents over the years.
"There are a few other companies that have printed homes and structures," Ballard says.
But you guys have printed it 15 times and it's getting great results for us.
Open the Chrome app and go to the page or document you want to have printed.
After a newly ordered ninth printing, the publisher will have printed more than 1,150,000 hardcover copies.
" — Caroline Snell, 240, Bushwick, Brooklyn "I design huge posters I then have printed professionally ($21956) shaming her.
During his 16-year tenure, Mr. Lewin claims to have printed the photographs for all of Avedon's exhibitions.
He and a colleague went to collect the latest SWIFT acknowledgement messages, which would normally have printed off automatically.
STEVE LIESMAN: But just getting back to it, John, several big European countries have printed negative prints on GDP, right?
Over the past 7 years, America and Europe have printed almost three trillion dollars and inflation is nowhere in sight.
Padilla has warned counties about the unusually large number of ballots they need to have printed and ready for voters.
"I could have printed the impeller in a grid down and been up and running the same day," he said.
Since the arrests, Haitian newspapers have printed names that corresponded to social media profiles of U.S. citizens claiming military backgrounds.
The Ambazonians have printed passports, designed a currency and a flag, composed a national anthem and set up a satellite TV station.
My thought was that if Warhol had been alive then, he would have printed his work on canvas too, with a machine.
If only a few small outlets have printed a tantalizing quote from a famous person, it's possible they've made the quote up.
I have printed her words here, and you are just going to have sit there and read them, because I make the rules.
All the models that I have printed, and the vast majority that I have seen, are custom sculpted by individuals that love the game.
Mr. Selkirk, who is the only person to have printed Ms. Arbus's negatives since her death in 19723, was a source for Mr. Jacob.
A big chunk of the cash that the US, the eurozone, Japan, other advanced countries have printed is floating around in the world underground economy.
While sure, someone could have printed this up for fake internet points, it seems like a lot of work and money just for some trolling.
Shelton, 41, who has publicly talked about his hometown of Ada, appears to have printed his name on the front of the textbook in 1982.
They would likely have printed yard signs and spun out poll-tested messages about race, education, and poverty targeted to "activate" narrow segments of the electorate.
After my first child, a daughter, was born I must have printed the paperwork required to obtain a gun permit in New Jersey a dozen times.
They have printed thousands of light blue passports for Ambazonia - the Anglophones' aspirational independent homeland - designed a currency and written a national anthem, five members told Reuters.
"The only thing I've seen is what you guys have printed in the press, so I have no reason to even take on the question," he said.
Mr. King expressed worry over the endless amounts of money that central banks in the United States, Japan and other countries have printed to help goose the economy.
But my bride would have printed this photo, looked at it often and reminisced over this moment as her dad walked her down the aisle on her wedding day.
To examine this phenomenon, the researchers at Caltech presented volunteers with pictures of scenic landscapes that they could have printed on a piece of merchandise, such as a coffee mug.
Anthony Atala and his colleagues at the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine, in North Carolina, have printed ears, bones and muscles in this way, and have implanted them successfully into animals.
I came to the fifth annual Photo Booth Expo hoping to go home with a comically large pile of selfies, but none of the 12-something exhibiting photo booths have printed out anything.
Stock markets, after years of steady increases, wobbled last week amid concern that central banks, which have printed money and cut interest rates to bolster economic activity following the financial crisis, will pare back their support.
From 2000 on, the Davos boom and the emerging markets boom have been pretty much one and the same, a living ideal of globalization helped by central banks that have printed trillions of dollars of new money.
I sit in my office and stare at the Carrie Mae Weems pictures I have printed out and framed on my wall, from her famous Kitchen Table Series, a suite of photographs foregrounding Weems' body at a dinner table.
Rooms at Casa Tortuga and Casa Chukum, a sleek boutique hotel that opened north of the zócalo last spring, have printed materials in their rooms with information about the stromatolites and the best way to interact with the lagoon.
According to the affidavit for her arrest, Winner was one of six employees at her Georgia NSA office to have printed that document and was the only one of those six who had emailed the Intercept from her desk computer.
Much has been said about all the money the United States, Europe and Japan have printed to stimulate the post-crisis recovery, but China has printed more than twice as much as those three combined, expanding its money supply by $16 trillion.
After a blistering speech earlier in the day in which he lashed out women who have accused him of sexual impropriety and the news outlets that have printed their stories, Trump didn't once mention the swirling controversies at the massive evening rally.
The photographs of erupting smoke bombs from the Italian duo Goldschmied & Chiari (set off in their studio), which they have printed on mirrored glass, evoke the mass destruction of modern warfare as well as memories of 9/11, while implicating our reflections in the turmoil.
Donald Trump on Thursday sought to discredit the women who have accused him of groping and lashed out at the news organizations that have printed their stories, as the GOP nominee seeks to beat back cascading stories about alleged his sexual misconduct toward women.
"We entered the industry seven years ago with the first powerful, affordable desktop SLA 3D printer and since then have shipped more than 50 thousand printers, and our customers have printed more than 40 million parts," co-founder and CEO Max Lobovsky said in a release tied to the announcement.
In their studio space on West 13th Street, Mr. Cox and Mr. Silver will greet customers by appointment only, offering new and archival Duckie pieces and a selection of things they love: ceramics by Jennefer Hoffmann, a friend; vintage pieces they have printed or embroidered over, to Duckify; photographs by Andreas Laszlo Konrath, a collaborator (and former Duckie model), whose work is on show in the first of the space's art exhibitions.
Upper Deck Company also released a Firefly version of their Legendary Encounters game in the same year. Quantum Mechanix have printed a Firefly-themed deck of standard playing cards.
Anthea Hume: Edmund Spenser: Protestant Poet. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1984. Godfrey may indeed have printed the Prayer by or with the approval of Tyndale (as John Foxe indicates) ca.1532-6 in London or in 1531 in Antwerp.
32 This type-founder did not arrive. Bhimji Parekh failed to realize his ambition of printing literature in Indian characters. The press might have printed some literature in English. It would be reasonable to assume that some types would have been brought with the press.
Winter 2007. His own presses have printed and published many of New Zealand's most noted poets.Ian Wedde, Bill Manhire, Wystan Curnow, Anne Donovan, Elizabeth Smither, Michael Harlow. He has also produced books himself, and in collaboration with artists and printmakers in New Zealand and overseas.
Various authors have printed mass estimates ranging from 11 to 14 times the mass of the Sun, although Tetzlaff et al. (2011) gives a mass of just . It is about 3.4 million years old and is spinning with a projected rotational velocity of 24 km/s.
The tonic solfa is found in Ireland and possibly Wales, especially in schools. Many schools have printed sheets with tunes notated in tonic solfa, although in Ireland more have teaching by note. With the availability of good standard notation tutor books, teaching is possibly moving in this direction.
This version was published under the title Budak Kampung. By 2008, The Kampung Boy had been reprinted 16 times, and translated into various languages such as Portuguese, French, and Japanese. Countries that have printed localised versions of The Kampung Boy include Brazil, Germany, Korea and the United States.
On November 23, The Washington Post reported on telemarketing pranks in which they named a number of websites, including howtoprankatelemarketer.ytmnd.com. Various other news reporting sites have printed the same article, including Reuters and The Wall Street Journal. A Swedish newspaper, metro, also included the site in a separate article.
He appears to have been brought to Sweden to print a missal for the Archbishopric of Uppsala, known as Missale Upsalense vetus, which typographic evidence shows him to have printed in Stockholm in late 1484. He apparently then returned to Lübeck, where the last record of him is in 1519.
Two different broadside songsheets printed by him survive, dated to about 1523; two survivals of ephemeral unbound works from such an early date suggest that he may have printed a considerable amount of music. The texts are in English, suggesting they were for the local market, not export. After his death, the musical type were acquired by John Gough.
Early buildings had windows and doors made by drawing lines in a single color on simple rectangular blocks. Sometimes they had slanted roofs made with another piece of wood, painted another color, stacked on top. A common early station design consisted of a simple platform with a roof on two or three supports along the longer axis. Later buildings have printed multicolor patterns.
HP Educational Basic optical mark-reader card. Mark sense (electrographic) cards, developed by Reynold B. Johnson at IBM, have printed ovals that could be marked with a special electrographic pencil. Cards would typically be punched with some initial information, such as the name and location of an inventory item. Information to be added, such as quantity of the item on hand, would be marked in the ovals.
This is because the Nepal national team isn't lucrative enough to afford kit partnership deals with manufacturers. Very little is known about the history prior to 1998. However, during the 1998 Asian Games in Bangkok, the Nepalese national team hired Bijay Shah to provide technical assistance to the squad, while also acting as the assistant coach. At the time, the team didn't have printed sportswear for the tournament.
As the editor of Book World from 1967-1969, Dobell published numerous book reviews by Mario Puzo, including the first book review Puzo ever wrote. "I think Byron ... was the only guy who would have printed it and certainly the only guy who would have given it a front page."The Godfather Papers and Other Confessions by Mario Puzo, G.P. Putnam's Sons, New York, 1972, pp. 81, 94, et al.
O'Donnell graduated from Yale University in 1972. Periodicals ranging from Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine to Omni have printed more than seventy of his shorter works.ISFDB, Kevin O’Donnell Jr. – Summary Bibliography (accessed November 8, 2012) A number have also been anthologized, both in the United States and overseas. He has published ten books in America, and has been reprinted in the United Kingdom, France, Israel, the Netherlands, Spain, and Germany.
Sir Jacobus van Meteren (born 1519) was the financier and printer of early English versions of the Bible. He was involved in the printing of an edition of Tyndale's New Testament in 1535 (Herbert #15). The Coverdale Bible of 1535 (Herbert #18) may also have been his work. He may also have printed the Matthew Bible of 1537 (Herbert #34), the combined work of William Tyndale, Myles Coverdale and John Rogers.
In 1468 Meditationes vitae domini was the first book he is known to have printed. The German edition of the Legenda Aurea of Jacobus de Voragine, was the first illustrated book he printed. In 1471/72 Zainer made the first printed edition of the extremely popular Der Heiligen Leben.Marianne E. Kalinke, The Book of Reykjahólar: The Last of the Great Medieval Legendaries (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1996), p. 4.
The editor who originally approved the cartoons, Carsten Juste, later declared that the opponents of free speech had "won" because the furor would almost undoubtedly deter future editors from printing anything similar. He thought it unlikely that anyone would print a caricature of Muhammad within a generation. He also said that, had he known exactly what the consequences would be, that is death threats, boycotts, and terror threats, he would not have printed the cartoons.
Some of these events include the Sulu Co-op bombing in March 2006 and the Basilan hostage crisis were the Abu Sayyaf Group used schoolchildren as body shields from the Filipino police and military. The comic book character Ameer has become popular and local vendors have printed unauthorized shirts with his image. Over 600,000 of the 10-issue series have been distributed through the island and are in both English and local Filipino dialect.
Using wooden letters at first, he later used lead and tin movable type. His company prospered and grew. He is said to have printed several books including Speculum Humanae Salvationis with several assistants including the letter cutter Johann Fust, and it was this letter cutter Fust (often spelled Faust) who, when Laurens was nearing death, broke his promise of secrecy and stole his presses and type and took them to Mainz where he started his own printing company.
Leonor was born on January 12, 1963 in Cartago, Valle del Cauca, Colombia. She is the second of six children of Juan Antonio Espinosa and Josefina De la Ossa de Espinosa, originally from Sincé, a municipality located in the Colombian Caribbean region. These roots have printed the character and personality of Leonor, exerting a huge influence on her culinary proposal. Leonor grew up and lived most of her youth in Cartagena, Bolívar, where she studied Economics and Fine Arts.
Small presses are publishers, which means that they engage in a book selection process, along with editing, marketing and distribution. Small presses also enter into a contract with the author, often paying royalties for being allowed to sell the book. Publishers own the copies they have printed, but usually do not own the copyright to the book itself. In contrast, printers merely print a book, and sometimes offer limited distribution if they are a POD printing press.
By 1555, he had his own print shop and was an accomplished printer. The first book he is known to have printed was La Institutione di una fanciulla nata nobilmente, by Giovanni Michele Bruto, with a French translation. This was soon followed by many other works in French and Latin, which in point of execution rivalled the best printing of his time. The art of engraving then flourished in the Netherlands, and Dutch engravers illustrated many of his editions.
In March 1940 Gayle Woolson came from the United States as the first pioneer to settle in Costa Rica. She was joined by Almalia Ford before April when they, along with four Costa Ricans, held a memorial service for the death of May Maxwell. There were four Costa Ricans convert to the religion by August 1940. In October 1940 the group was able to have printed a translation of a pamphlet authored by Shoghi Effendi characterizing the religion.
The publisher claimed to have printed 50,000 copies of the song a year earlier than Firth, Pond & Co. did so for Emmett. Faulds said that his version was copyrighted and attributed to Hays as "Way Down South in Dixie". Furthermore, Faulds wrote that only the lyrics had been copyrighted, since the music came from an earlier English song that began "If I were a soldier wouldn't I go . . .", and which had been subsequently parodied in a children's song.
Paltašić is known to have printed the famous Greek and Roman works (by Cicero, Diodorus Siculus, Virgil, Terence, Ovid, Sextus Propertius, Juvenal, Tibullus, Catullus and others) as well as the works of humanist writers, historiographers and lexicographers. On top of this he also printed books concerning religion, such as the Bible in Italian. Paltašić's works currently remain all over Europe. In Southeastern Europe, there remain 41 of his works, out of which 38 are kept in Croatia, with three in Montenegro.
The sarong is the popular garment worn mostly by Muslim men, notably in Java, Bali, Sumatra and Kalimantan. It is a large tube or length of fabric, often wrapped around the waist, and the fabric often has woven plaid or checkered patterns, or brightly colored by means of batik or ikat dyeing. Many modern sarongs have printed designs, often depicting animals or plants. It is mostly worn as a casual wear but often worn during the congregational prayers as well.
He is also known to have printed at Binondo, Manila, between 1623 and 1627, as the early printing press was being transported to several places to bring the art of printing. In 1637 he published and printed what is thought to be the first newspaper in the Philippines, the 14-page "Sucesos Felices", that reported mainly on Spanish military victories. It is estimated that all throughout his career, from 1609 to 1639, Tomas Pinpin printed at least fourteen different publications.
Lovecraft approved of other writers building on his work, believing such common allusions built up "a background of evil verisimilitude." Many readers have believed it to be a real work, with booksellers and librarians receiving many requests for it; pranksters have listed it in rare book catalogues, and a student smuggled a card for it into the Yale University Library's card catalog. Capitalizing on the notoriety of the fictional volume, real-life publishers have printed many books entitled Necronomicon since Lovecraft's death.
'His majesty has lately issued a new edict against the introduction and use of opium in this kingdom, and requested the use of our press to print it. We have printed at his expense, and according to his request, 10,000 copies. The immediate cause of this new edict was the following. Three large boats or proas loaded with opium from Singapore, armed and containing about 30 Chinamen each, were heard to be selling it at out places on the Gulf.
The fact that the publishers have printed other books by gay authors seems to support Mortimer's claims. Its 2019 book, Is He Nuts?: Why a Gay Man Would Become a Member of the Church of Jesus Christ (hardcover, August 30, 2019) written by a gay Mormon author Dennis Schleicher, would testify to that. The ensuing media furore eventually resulted in Cedar Fort returning publishing rights to Jensen and his co-author, who, thanks to the international attention, sold Woven at auction to Scholastic Press.
Three women photographed wearing sarongs in 1905. A sarong or sarung (; meaning "string" or "to sheath" in Indonesian languages) is a large tube or length of fabric, often wrapped around the waist, worn in the Indian subcontinent, Southeast Asia, Maldives, Sri lanka, the Arabian Peninsula, Horn of Africa, East Africa, and on many Pacific islands. The fabric often has woven plaid or checkered patterns, or may be brightly colored by means of batik or ikat dyeing. Many modern sarongs have printed designs, often depicting animals or plants.
They have printed a limited number of copies of their electronica EP self-titled Dreamlab. An LP version was completed by late 2008. Also in late 2008, Haywood provided background vocals for the ballad "Out from Under" sung by American pop singer Britney Spears off her sixth studio album, Circus. In 2009, Haywood co-wrote Perth singer Cassie Davis' third single, "Do It Again", and "Pieces," a track on Allison Iraheta's debut album Just Like You, she also wrote "Masquerade" for Ashley Tisdale's second album, Guilty Pleasure .
Hogarth's other works in the 1730s include A Midnight Modern Conversation (1733), Southwark Fair (1733), The Sleeping Congregation (1736), Before and After (1736), Scholars at a Lecture (1736), The Company of Undertakers (Consultation of Quacks) (1736), The Distrest Poet (1736), The Four Times of the Day (1738), and Strolling Actresses Dressing in a Barn (1738). He might also have printed Burlington Gate (1731), evoked by Alexander Pope's Epistle to Lord Burlington, and defending Lord Chandos, who is therein satirized. This print gave great offence, and was suppressed.
The solution to the creation - evolution issue resulted only after the state board had received numerous complaints about the earlier decision. In 1972 the California Board of Education decided to approve a statement prepared by its curriculum committee by proposing neutrality in science textbooks. Dogmatic statements in science books would be removed, and replaced with conditional statements. Textbooks dealing with evolution would have printed in them a statement indicating that science cannot answer all questions about origins, and that evolution is a theory, not a fact.
Pierce's almanac, as was typical, commenced with the month of March, which according to English law and custom was the first month of the year, rather than the Gregorian calendar that began in January. Consequently, Daye must have printed Pierce's almanac prior to the English first of the year that began on March 15. In 1640, he printed the Bay Psalm Book, the first book published in the American colonies. The next year, 1641, Daye was rewarded for his work with three hundred acres of land.
June 30th, June 30th received mixed to negative reviews. Brautigan acknowledges in the introduction that the "quality of [the poems] is uneven but I have printed them all anyway because they are a diary expressing my feelings and emotions in Japan and the quality of life is often uneven." The Kirkus reviewer called some poems "dreadful" but "every once in a while a testament to the variety and flexibility of poetry that's very refreshing." Choice called it "in summary, an often good book" that would benefit from editing.
The Letter was printed with the second edition of the Apology, published in 1750. Addressed to Philip Stanhope, 4th Earl of Chesterfield, it argues that Stanhope, as a man, was able to overcome the libertinism of his youth; but that Phillips, as a woman, could not escape her past in the view of the public. Chapone's Remarks was published anonymously in 1750, but Chapone told Richardson privately that she had written it. Indeed, Richardson read a manuscript version of this work and may have printed it in 1750.
The group of the first three, 5-7-5, is called the kami-no-ku ("upper phrase"), and the second, 7-7, is called the shimo-no-ku ("lower phrase"). In English, the units are often rendered as lines and indeed some modern Japanese poets have printed them as such; Hiroaki Sato notes that such lineation is not representative of the Japanese, where mono-linear units are the norm, and Mark Morris comments that tanka and other forms are "packed" by "Anglophone scholars...into a limited repertoire of rectilinear containers".
His platinum prints have a deep magenta-brown tone, for example, whereas his gum prints have a distinct reddish hue. Photogravures of his images in Camera Work, which he considered to be true prints, were more neutral, tending toward warm black-and-white tones. Before 1902 White dated his photographs according to when the negative was made, even though he might not have printed it that same year. For his later prints he often assigned two dates, one when the image was taken and another when it was printed.
Murray Schumach's review in The New York Times on June 25, 1961, opens: "It was not quite proper to have printed The Carpetbaggers between covers of a book. It should have been inscribed on the walls of a public lavatory." He complains that the plot is merely "an excuse for a collection of monotonous episodes about normal and abnormal sex—and violence ranging from simple battery to gruesome varieties of murder". On the day the review was published, The Carpetbaggers was already at number nine on the New York Times bestseller list.
Child included this ballad in "The English and Scottish Popular Ballads" because he thought it was derived from a traditional story from Europe: > This piece could not be admitted here on its own merits. At the first look, > it would be classed with the vulgar prodigies printed for hawkers to sell > and for Mopsa and Dorcas to buy........I have printed this ballad because, > in a blurred, enfeebled, and disfigured shape, it is representative in > England of one of the most remarkable tales and one of the most impressive > and beautiful ballads of the European continent.
Poolaw's photographic legacy – which his daughter, Linda arranged to have printed, catalogued and exhibited after his death in 1984-record this intersection of cultures and transformation of family life, work and leisure in images of engaging thoughtfulness and sensitivity. The exhibit, titled "War Bonnets, Tin Lizzies and Patent Leather Pumps: Kiowa Culture in Transition 1925-1955," traveled around the country in the early 1990s and was the subject of a major documentary video. Together, Linda Poolaw and Charles Junkerman developed the year-long seminar as a special project. Students helped print all the negatives and research the individuals represented.
Military historians have printed transcripts of the hearings to instruct on the proper relationship between civilian and military officials in a democracy. Russell competed in the 1952 Democratic presidential primary, but was shut out of serious consideration by northern Democratic leaders who saw his support for segregation as untenable outside of the Jim Crow South. When Lyndon Johnson arrived in the Senate, he sought guidance from knowledgeable Senate aide Bobby Baker, who advised that all senators were "equal" but Russell was the most "equal"—meaning the most powerful. Johnson assiduously cultivated Russell through all of their joint Senate years and beyond.
His productions over the next decade-or-so included the first edition of Bellenden's The hystory and croniklis of Scotland, 1536, as well as a commission from the king to publish The New Actis and Constitutionis of Parliament, the first ever printed edition of Scottish legislation. After many years in preparation this latter title appeared in 1542 and two of the three surviving copies are printed on vellum. Other works Davidson is thought to have printed include a conjectured c.1540 edition (now lost) of the long poem The Palice of Honour by the makar and churchman Gavin Douglas.
Stanford's own books have printed biographical and bibliographical errors; for instance, the biographical note for the posthumously published book, Crib Death, states that Stanford was "born in 1949 in Greenville, Mississippi," when in fact he was born in 1948 in Richton, Mississippi, some away,Stanford, Frank. Crib Death. Kensington, CA: Ironwood Press. 1978. and the table of contents for The Light The Dead See: Selected Poems of Frank Stanford lists The Singing Knives as having been published in 1972 and Crib Death as having been published in 1979, when in fact they were published in 1971 and 1978, respectively.
However Sharpe was unable to identify Martin Marprelate. In late September the last of the Marprelate tracts, The Protestation, was published, perhaps at Wolston Priory on the press Waldegrave had left there. According to Black, Penry and Job Throckmorton may have printed the first pages, which 'appear to have been set by amateurs', while Waldegrave may have been responsible for the printing of the latter pages. At some time in 1589 Crane married her second husband, George Carleton, and it was as Elizabeth Carleton that she was examined on 1 October 1589 by the ecclesiastical commissioners.
However, this trend is unpopular among many video game collectors because it may decrease the perceived value of game, as manuals are sometimes considered works of art themselves as an essential part of the game's packaging. Some consider reading manuals an enjoyable experience. Also, reading manuals on a computer monitor or other display device may be considered more "awkward" as opposed to printed paper. As opposed to most console games which have printed manuals, games for the Nintendo 3DS, PlayStation Vita and Wii U store manuals in digital form on the Nintendo 3DS game card, PlayStation Vita game card and Wii U optical disc respectively.
Time magazine does not appear to have printed Ryan's letter or to have addressed his complaint in a later issue. In October Westinghouse withdrew its five stations from NAB membership, which Billboard magazine suggested was largely due to Westinghouse's dissatisfaction with how the NAB had handled KDKA's 25th anniversary ("Westinghouse Exits From NAB With All Five of Its Stations", The Billboard, October 27, 1945, page 5). For its 25th anniversary on August 20, 1945, WWJ claimed the titles of "World's First Station" and where "commercial radio broadcasting began". One complicating factor is that the U.S. government initially did not have a formal definition of "broadcasting" or any specific regulations.
Under the rules of the court, the Society (as appellant) was required to have printed the testimony and proceedings of the initial court. The Society had declined to do so, and the court of appeals concluded that it could not find in favor of the appellant without any printed record. The key question in answering the remaining issue, the court of appeals said, was whether the 1886 entity calling itself the "German Evangelical Society" was, in fact, the same voluntary, unincorporated body which formed the PHC in 1860. The court said it was not and could never be, since as a matter of law it was a completely new entity.
In one typical use of freepost, a business sends bulk mail to potential customers, the bulk mail including envelopes or postcards that potential customers can return to the business by freepost. In another typical use, magazines include subscription cards that potential subscribers can return by freepost. In yet another typical use, a seller can provide a merchandise return label bearing the appropriate freepost indicia (as described below) to a customer so that the customer can return the item to the seller by freepost upon issuance of a Return Merchandise Authorization. A non-commercial usecase would be to return lost items belonging to some business: the item will have printed on the back "if found please return by freepost to ".
From the mid-1950s onward, Stockhausen designed (and in some cases arranged to have printed) his own musical scores for his publisher, Universal Edition, which often involved unconventional devices. The score for his piece Refrain, for instance, includes a rotatable (refrain) on a transparent plastic strip. Early in the 1970s, he ended his agreement with Universal Edition and began publishing his own scores under the Stockhausen- Verlag imprint. This arrangement allowed him to extend his notational innovations (for example, dynamics in Weltparlament [the first scene of Mittwoch aus Licht] are coded in colour) and resulted in eight German Music Publishers Society Awards between 1992 (Luzifers Tanz) and 2005 (Hoch-Zeiten, from Sonntag aus Licht).
The Super Game Boy cartridge, Super Famicom version The Super Game Boy is compatible with the same cartridges as the original Game Boy: original Game Boy cartridges, the Game Boy Camera, and dual-mode Game Boy Color cartridges (in Game Boy-mode). The unit could map the four shades of green to various colors on the screen. Later Game Boy games that were optimized to use the Super Game Boy had additional color information and could override the on-screen colors, display a graphical border around the screen, and display special background sprites, as seen in the Mario's Picross title screen. Those games would have printed a small "Super Game Boy Game Pak" logo on the box and cartridge.
He was very closely involved in the whole process of printmaking, and must have printed at least early examples of his etchings himself. At first he used a style based on drawing, but soon moved to one based on painting, using a mass of lines and numerous bitings with the acid to achieve different strengths of line. Towards the end of the 1630s, he reacted against this manner and moved to a simpler style, with fewer bitings.White 1969, pp. 5–6 He worked on the so-called Hundred Guilder Print in stages throughout the 1640s, and it was the "critical work in the middle of his career", from which his final etching style began to emerge.White 1969, p.
He became a native of Prague, and was circumcised at Amsterdam. In 1686–87, he worked for two printers of Amsterdam, but from 1690 to 1694 seems to have owned a printing establishment and to have printed several Hebrew books, including his own Judeo-German translation of Hannover's Yewen Mezulah. He assisted with the engravings for the 1695 Passover Haggadah, which was printed by Kosman Emrich. In 1709, Moses established a printing-office in the German town of Halle, where in 1712 he printed his Tela'ot Moshe (or "Weltbeschreibung"), a Judeo- German work on the Ten Tribes, having collected the material from a number of sources, particularly from Abraham Farissol and Gedaliah ibn Yahya.
The Ten Voluntaries for the Organ or Harpsichord are his only works known to this day; they were published by the composer in 1758, and printed a number of times since. In the last fifty years, various selections from them have printed in collections: H. Diack Johnstone published numbers 9 and 10 in 1966 (Novello, London); Beechey published (nos 2, 5, 7, 8, 9 & 10) in 1969, and Diack Johnstone also published 6 of them (nos 3, 5, 7, 8, 9, & 10) in 1988. A new complete edition of the entire set has been published in 2002, in Cambridge (UK) [reference required as there appears no such publication 2016]. A complete edition can be found on the IMSLP site.
Monetary Explanations of the Weimar Republic's Hyperinflation: Some Neglected Contributions in Contemporary German Literature, David E.W. Laidler & George W. Stadler, Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, vol. 30, pages 816, 818 John Maynard Keynes described the situation in The Economic Consequences of the Peace: "The inflationism of the currency systems of Europe has proceeded to extraordinary lengths. The various belligerent Governments, unable, or too timid or too short-sighted to secure from loans or taxes the resources they required, have printed notes for the balance." It was during then that French and British economic experts began to claim that Germany deliberately destroyed its economy to avoid war reparations, but both governments had conflicting views on how to handle the situation.
Western Electric's ERPI division dominated the theater hardware market when the sound revolution finally got underway, so its new standard speed was universally adopted by Fox and all the other studios as each began making sound films. (See the Fleischer cartoon Finding His Voice (1929), credited to Mr. W. E. Erpi.) As a consequence, Case's tests and DeForest's early Phonofilms, shot at about 21 frames per second, gave speakers and singers laughably high-pitched "helium voices" if they were run on a standard sound projector. The Library of Congress and other film archives have printed new copies of some early Phonofilms, modifying them by periodically duplicating frames and correspondingly "stretching" the soundtracks to make them compatible with standard projectors and telecine equipment.
However, the variable is visible to any function called from within the block.perldoc.perl.org: perlsub: Temporary Values via `local()` To create lexically-scoped local variables, use the `my` operator instead.perldoc.perl.org: perlsub: Private Variables via `my()` To understand how it works consider the following code: $a = 1; sub f() { local $a; $a = 2; g(); } sub g() { print "$a "; } g(); f(); g(); this will output: 1 2 1 This happens since the global variable $a is modified to a new temporary (local) meaning inside , but the global value is restored upon leaving the scope of . Using `my` in this case instead of `local` would have printed 1 three times since in that case the `$a` variable would be limited to the static scope of the function and not seen by .
Bitting is the author of three collections of poetry: Notes to the Beloved (Winner of the Sacramento Poetry Center Book Award, 2011), Good Friday Kiss (C&R; Press, 2008), and Blue Laws (Finishing Line Press, 2007). Good Friday Kiss was chosen by Thomas Lux as the winner of the 2007 DeNovo Prize for 1st Book of Poetry. Publications that have printed her poetry and fiction include American Poetry Review, Narrative Magazine, Prairie Schooner, Verse Daily, Poetry Daily, LA Weekly, Rattle, diode, and The Cortland Review. In collaboration with her husband, actor Phil Abrams, Bitting adapted a number of her works for the visual medium known as poem films, some of which were presented by Atticus Review, Cheek Teeth, and Moving Poems.
Dorn's printer's mark with the Brunswick coat of arms (1506) Title page of Dath boke der hilgen Ewangelien (1506) Hans Dorn (or Johannes Dorn) was a German printer of the late 15th and early 16th centuries, active in Brunswick He is known to have been in Brunswick during the period of 1493-1525.450 Jahre Braunschweiger Druckgewerbe (1958), p. 4. He may have been active as a bookseller before becoming a printer. The first book known to have printed by him, and at the same time the oldest known book printed in Brunswick, is a Low German Plenarium with the title Dath boke der hilgen Ewangelien. Lectien. Profecien unde Epistelen, dated 15 July 1506. An earlier print by Dorn, dated 1502, is mentioned in an 18th-century source.
In 1870, the Greek postal administration has received a new printing press from Germany. The German worker(s) who came in Athens to install this new machine have also done a new "mise en train" and have printed, using the hard method ("à sec"), sheets of the two most used values: (1 lepton for the newspapers and 20 lepta for the domestic letters, up to 15 grams). The result was once more, very disappointing: the impression was fine but, the shadow lines of the cheek are very short, in particular for the 1 lepton which is named "the shaved" by the collectors. For the 20 lepta, the spandrels are whiten and the head is quite often circled by a whitish halo.
We can see that a couple things can happen. :G will print no 0’s, ever, if all the Mn’s print 0’s, OR, :G will print ad infinitum 0’s if all the M’s print no 0’s, OR, :G will print 0’s for a while and then stop. Now, what happens when we apply E to G itself? :If E(G) determines that G never prints a 0 then we know that all the Mn’s have printed 0’s. And this means that, because all the Mn came from M, that M itself prints 0’s ad infinitum, OR :If E(G) determines that G does print a 0 then we know that not all the Mn’s print 0’s; therefore M does not print 0’s ad infinitum.
Sharaf had no conflict furthering Egypt's interests including those with Israel by maintaining cordial and polite relations with his Israeli Counterpart in Stockholm, ambassador Mordecay Kidron, who also happened to be his next door neighbor. He also chose, out of the available pictures at his disposal, to have printed in a local Cairo monthly magazine a photograph taken of him welcoming, as doyen of the consular corps, Pope Paul VI to Hong Kong at Kai Tak International Airport in December 1970, reflecting his sense of religious tolerance as a Muslim. He was a lateral thinker, a prolific reader, especially of military history, and a linguist who was proficient in several languages. A superb conversationalist known for his disarming charm and excellent social and people skills, he had an uncanny ability to establish rapport and win people over and achieve consensus.
In the 20th century the subject of Linton's death was raised again when his demise was included in the 1997 International Olympic Committee study on the Historical Evolution of Doping Phenomenon, and listed as the presumed first death due to doping during a competition. This was then repeated in a talk by Dr Gary Wadler who incorrectly associated the death of a cyclist at the 1886 Bordeaux–Paris race, referencing the former Olympic study. Other publications to have printed the story include Bob Goldman's Death in the Locker Room (1984), Barrie Houlihan's Dying to Win (1999), Les Woodland's Dope (1980), and The Sport Psych Handbook of 2005. These reports are littered with inaccuracies including the date of the race, five years before the first Bordeaux–Paris race in 1891, and the fact that the 'competitor' widely believed to be Linton, died during the race.
Customers who send bulk mail can get a discount on postage if they have printed the barcode themselves and have presorted the mail. This requires more than just a simple font; mailing lists must be standardized with up-to-date Coding Accuracy Support System (CASS)-certified software that adds and verifies a full, correct ZIP+4 Code and an additional two digits representing the exact delivery point. Furthermore, mail must be sorted in a specific manner to an 11-digit code with at least 150 mailpieces for each qualifying ZIP Code and must be accompanied by documentation confirming this. These steps are usually done with PAVE- certified software that also prints the barcoded address labels and the barcoded sack or tray tags. The assignment of delivery point digits (the 10th and 11th digits) is intended to ensure that every single mailable point in the country has its own 12-digit number.
The etching A Jersey vraic cart, which Blampied had just managed to have printed and signed before the island was invaded, was issued by the Print Club of Cleveland to coincide with the exhibition. Blampied did not return to London after the war but remained in Jersey, mostly working in oils and watercolours, except for a series of 12 silhouettes he published in 1950 and a few etchings in 1958, one of which he exhibited at the Royal Academy. In 1948 he designed a postage stamp to celebrate the third anniversary of the liberation of Jersey, and he designed the first Jersey regional stamp, issued in 1964. He continued to sell his watercolours and oil paintings in the UK and US, mostly at the annual exhibitions of the Royal Society of British Artists and through the dealers Annans in Glasgow and Guy Mayer in New York.
179–80 In 1940, it was known that Romania did not enjoy a very positive image in Germany, with the country's consul in Cologne noting that its inhabitants were seen as "gypsies or at best Balkan people, with very primitive habits". Pușcariu attempted to change this through numerous articles appearing in speciality publications that he was able to have printed due to his connections in Germany.Olărescu, p. 180 The propaganda books and articles that came out under Pușcariu's supervision intended to show Germans that Romanians were an Aryan people, that Romania deserved to win back its lost territories thanks to its alliance with Germany, that Russians were a communist people desiring to use Bessarabia as a beachhead to attack the rest of Europe, while Romanians had been anti-communist since the Hungarian–Romanian War began in 1918 and viewed the disputed province as a line of defense.
When William McKinley became President of the United States in 1897, U.S. Senator Henry Cabot Lodge and several Congressmen from New York recommended Stoddard as a nonpolitical candidate to replace Governor Benjamin Joseph Franklin. McKinley nominated Stoddard to become territorial secretary on June 5, 1901, and Stoddard subsequently moved to Phoenix in 1902. The primary duties of the secretary of the territory were to attend legislative sessions to record laws and resolutions, to record acts of the governor, to seal documents signed by the governor, to record articles of incorporation, to certify elections, to provide copies to the public of official documents, to have printed and published the laws of each legislative session, to store and secure the original legislative acts and resolutions, and other records, deeds, maps, etc., to distribute the published statutes as required, and to perform the duties of the governor when the governor was out of the territory or otherwise incapable.
The classically endowed city of Rome attracted the first printers known to have set up shop outside Germany, Arnold Pannartz and Konrad Sweynheim, closely followed by the brothers Johann and Wendelin of Speyer (de Spira), and the Frenchman Nicolas Jenson. The sequence of appearance and production dates for types used by these printers have yet to be established with certainty; all four are known to have printed with types ranging from textur Gothic to fully developed romans inspired by the earlier humanistic writing, and within a few years the center of printing in Italy shifted from Rome to Venice. Some time before 1472 in Venice, Johann and Wendelin issued material printed with a half-Gothic-half-roman type known as "Gotico-antiqua". This design paired simplified Gothic capitals with a rationalized humanistic minuscule letter set, itself combining Gothic minuscule forms with elements of Carolingian, in a one step forward, half step back blending of styles.
In the early sixteenth century, the Italian printer Aldus Manutius realized that personal books would need to fit in saddle bags and thus produced books in the smaller formats of quartos (one- quarter-size pages) and octavos (one-eighth-size pages). Leipzig, a prominent centre of the German book-trade, in 1739 had 20 bookshops, 15 printing establishments, 22 book-binders and three type-foundries in a population of 28,000 people. In the German book-distribution system of the late 18th and early 19th centuries, the end-user buyers of books "generally made separate arrangements with either the publisher or a bookbinder to have printed sheets bound according to their wishes and their budget". The reduced cost of books facilitated cheap lightweight Bibles, made from tissue-thin oxford paper, with floppy covers, that resembled the early Arabic Qurans, enabling missionaries to take portable books with them around the world, and modern wood glues enabled the addition of paperback covers to simple glue bindings.
Harris gave the following description of this fragment: > Two leaves of a sixth century MS. Of the Gospels, the first of the leaves > having lost its upper half. The second leaf, having been folded in the > middle when used to bind some other MS., has become illegible where it was > folded. The hand is a large bold script, and the MS. From which the > fragments came must have been a very fine one. The text is broken into short > commata which are distinguished by a mart of punctuation: occasionally there > are traces of the use of a colon as a mark of punctuation, and of as > aspirate or perhaps a diacritic mark, (see the third line of Fol. 1, recto): > we have printed this last as if it were an aspirate, but with some > hesitation; it looks more like the pair of dots which denote initial iota > connected by a scribe’s flourish.
The various belligerent Governments, unable, or too > timid or too short-sighted to secure from loans or taxes the resources they > required, have printed notes for the balance. Keynes also pointed out how government price controls discourage production: > The presumption of a spurious value for the currency, by the force of law > expressed in the regulation of prices, contains in itself, however, the > seeds of final economic decay, and soon dries up the sources of ultimate > supply. If a man is compelled to exchange the fruits of his labors for paper > which, as experience soon teaches him, he cannot use to purchase what he > requires at a price comparable to that which he has received for his own > products, he will keep his produce for himself, dispose of it to his friends > and neighbors as a favor, or relax his efforts in producing it. A system of > compelling the exchange of commodities at what is not their real relative > value not only relaxes production, but leads finally to the waste and > inefficiency of barter.
Kickshaws (sometimes Association Kickshaws, a non-profit Association under French law) is a private press run by John Crombie and Sheila Bourne. Based in Paris, the press was founded in 1979 by Crombie as a vehicle for his literary and design aspirations; since then, he and Bourne (who often creates artwork for the books), have printed by hand and published more than 150 small books. The design and typography of Kickshaws publications is unusual, involving a wide range of (often French) type designs, letterpress printing in multiple colours, and the use of unusual formats and binding styles, notably a simple form of comb-binding which allows the leaves of a book to be folded and refolded in different sequences. Textually, many of the books are either Crombie's own poetry or fiction, or his interpretations or translations of French or Francophile humorists and absurdist writers, including Samuel Beckett, Alphonse Allais and Pierre Henri Cami (the latter being a particular favourite of Crombie's, and a writer he considers greatly undervalued).
Cushman arrived back in London, 17 February 1622. He was carrying with him a valuable document known as the Bradford- Winslow "Relation" – (or historically known as 'Mourt's Relation') the detailed journal-account, that is, day-to-day written record of the exploration of areas of Cape Cod and Plymouth bay and harbour. The "Relation" is the single most important historical document of its kind in early American history.Robert E. Cushman and Franklin P. Cole, Robert Cushman of Kent (1577–1625) : Chief Agent of the Plymouth Pilgrims (1617–1625)(General Society of Mayflower Descendants: 2005), 2nd Ed. edited by Judith Swan pp. 64–65 When Robert Cushman arrived in London at the end of February 1622, he hurried to have printed and disseminated 'Mourt's Relation' as quickly and widely as possible, which was obviously meant as propaganda for the colony.David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martin's Press, 2002), p. 52 The mission of Cushman in aid of the new Plymouth colony was much advanced by his return and arrival in London, 17 February 1622, with the signed approval of the terms of the Adventurers with him. It had been certified by the signatures of the leadership now led by Governor Bradford, successor to John Carver.

No results under this filter, show 119 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.