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"print run" Definitions
  1. the number of copies of a book, magazine, etc. printed at one time

106 Sentences With "print run"

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

" - Justin "The instructions are pictogram to reduce print run wastage.
Minions quickly sold out its initial print run of 30,000.
It's one of just 500 copies in the first print run.
Wong mailed the books himself, selling out of the first print run.
Pricey Jumpers had a print run of 20, priced at £1 ($1.35) each.
The stamp featuring Mr. Rogers will have a print run of about 15 million.
Readers and admirers lamented the end of Teen Vogue's print run after the announcement.
This time, the print run was 8,000, and only 76 copies were returned unsold.
Readers who preorder the book now will get a copy from the first print run.
You're effectively halving the number of pieces of paper you need for each print run.
More than a year after its publication, "Desintegriert Euch" is in its seventh print run.
John Sargent, the CEO for Holt parent company Macmillan, has said that Fire and Fury had an initial print run of 150,000 copies, and that to keep up with demand, Henry Holt has begun a second print run of more than 1 million copies.
The publisher said Tuesday that a sixth print run will go on sale later this month.
"A Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies, and Leadership" reportedly has an initial print run of 2628,28503 copies.
When Fire and Fury got an initial print run of 150,000, it was a show of confidence.
With an initial print run of 200,000, the new edition will be available across Germany every Thursday.
He asked for advance orders and, he said, soon had 19903,000, enough to support a print run.
It has about 700 subscribers and a print run of 2,400 copies, just below the county's population.
This book had a print run, but each copy was made with pages taken from comic books.
There are plans for a print run of 1 million based on consumer demand, Sky News said.
Macmillan, Comey's publisher, ordered 850,000 copies to meet expected demand compared with Wolff's first print run of 150,000.
That is reflected in the print run for Asterix and the Chariot Race, with five million copies planned.
So after inventory on the first and only print run is depleted, there will be no additional printings.
The company paid a seven-figure sum for the trilogy, and ordered a 750,000-copy first print run.
Gellara, which began on Thursday with a print run of 2,000 copies, does not list its office address.
Book sellers in the United States have already ordered 3,000 copies, and a second print run is underway.
The book had a large print run, with multiple editions, and was available in Parisian libraries and bookstores.
The first, with a print run of around 60,000 copies, was circulated at the women's marches in January.
For newcomers, it's a good opportunity to pick up Dragoon, as the initial print run sold out last year.
An announced print run of 250,000 often means fewer than 250,00 copies were printed—and sometimes fewer than 100,000.
"Dark Debts" was an instant success when Random House published it in 1996, with a 11,000-copy print run.
But her political activism and her lively social media presence extended her reach far beyond the paper's print run.
Happily, once realism has been pulped like the first print run of a fraudulent memoir, the fun can begin.
How can anyone possibly predict that a book, even a book you truly believe in, will be a No. 1 best-seller with a justified print run of a million-plus copies, rather than a No. 3 best-seller, better served by a more conservative print run of several hundred thousand copies?
The next edition will have a print run of 3,000 copies, and potentially more if additional funding can be found.
We also decided early on to try and fund the print run for issue one through preorders rather than crowdfunding.
"A Farewell to Arms" (1929) had a first print run of more than thirty thousand copies, huge in its day.
Her latest, "Guts," about tackling fourth grade and coping with anxiety, has an initial print run of one million copies.
Of the 1,775 shirts available, the Gulf of California porpoise had the smallest print run, with just 30 shirts available.
It sold out its initial print-run of 575,000 copies, and ended up on The New York Times best sellers list.
In all, it led to an impact that far outweighed its small circulation and brief print run (it ended in 2005).
Arcade has announced a print run of 75,000 copies, priced at $30 for the hardcover and $13.99 for the e-book.
Then he must arrange delivery of the magazine's 2,000-copy print run to Southeast Asian cities that are hundreds of miles apart.
Newsstands across France were preparing to sell out of the anniversary issue, which will have an initial print run of 1 million copies.
Newsstands across France were preparing to sell out of the anniversary issue, which will have an initial print run of 2000 million copies.
The magazine has a limited print run but is available for purchase in print and as a digital file on the appropriately named wiscohunk.com.
"Calexit" -- written by Matteo Pizzolo and illustrated by artist Amancay Nahuelpan -- launched last week with a print run of 25,000 for its first issue.
The book, which reportedly earned Cummins a seven-figure deal with Flatiron Books, had an initial print run of 500,000 books, according to Vox.
Nevertheless, the zoo has surpassed its goal of €25,000, and is now hoping to expand the book's size and print run by raising €35,000.
Though Mr. Kohn did say he plans to make the magazine a quarterly, reducing the current print run of six to four beginning next year.
The Art Workers' Coalition gave their poster a print run of 19653,27970 copies and distributed them fast, and free, to feed revulsion against the war.
Since the image originally went viral, Shelley has since sold out his initial print run, and has turned to Kickstarter to fund a new, updated poster.
The institute said in late 2015 that it planned an initial print run of up to 4,000 copies and wasn't sure whether more would be printed.
Dubbed "the survivors' issue," the magazine's first issue after the attacks sold nearly 103 million copies — a far cry from the weekly's usual 30k print run.
And, Mr. Klanten said, it had a lean initial print run of 8,000 as, he said, he would rather reprint the book than pulp unwanted copies.
" An RBA spokeswoman said in an emailed statement to Reuters the Bank "is aware of it and the spelling will be corrected at the next print run.
Since "The Crow Girl" is marketed as a blockbuster — with an initial print run of 100,000 copies — I think it's only fair to make pop-culture comparisons.
It briefly become the top-selling item in the toy and game category on Amazon when it launched, and it recently sold out its second print run.
" An RBA spokeswoman said in an emailed statement to Reuters the Bank "is aware of it and the spelling will be corrected at the next print run.
The original print run was tiny, and the copies that survive today are wildly expensive, but this winter, Taschen re-released the book in all its glory.
A Black Lotus from Magic's original print run recently sold for $87,000 on Ebay, but less pristine versions of the card routinely sell for a few thousand dollars.
So Young, an indie music title, makes about half its money from a 500-copy print run and half from an online shop selling prints and T-shirts.
Where the Crawdads Sing's first print run was 73,500 copies; industry tracker NPD BookScan reports that it has since sold over 1.4 million print units, not including ebooks.
Indeed, prior to Black Panther's record-breaking debut in early April—the first issue sold through a 33,000 initial print run and has gone into a second printing—Ms.
Mr. Kokonas said the Aviary book cost him $630,000 for development and an initial print run, and revenue has been over $3.2 million, with more than 42,000 copies sold.
But after the publisher disclosed information on a late-night television talk show the day before the book's publication, the first print run of 80,000 copies sold out immediately.
NS: We've gotten thousands of supporters who have preordered copies, who've allowed us to make this second issue at a 30,000-copy print run and distribute it around the country.
He told Publishers Weekly that he was dismayed by Minotaur's listless plans for its print run and promotion, so he bought "Nick Mason" back with financial backing from his agent.
Ms. Laris said she hoped to find an owner who could steer the free weekly, with a print run of about 40,000, through a time of rapid change in Los Angeles.
He points to the manga comic Astro Boy as having a unique and recognizable urban architecture during its print run from 1952 to 1968, though its style is more fantastically cartoonish.
The print run quickly sold out, but the company mysteriously failed to print more, making the comic a rare treasure available only on eBay for many times its original sticker price.
But the cargo ship carrying the 10,000-book print run from South Korea to the United States was seized at the Panama Canal because the vessel's owner was deep in debt.
All of this is to say that in an industry as quirky and illogical as book publishing — a business run by English majors — the incentive to lowball a print run is strong.
In 1921, the typesetters tried to put the book on sale, but after the suppression of the Kronstadt rebellion in March that year, the Bolsheviks confiscated the rest of the print run.
More than 5,000 games sold in a week and the game is now on its third print run, with a total of 30,000 games in English, and 14,000 in various foreign-language editions.
Every last part of the robot, save for its battery and motor, were created in a single print run, including all of the hydraulic components and the liquid that makes them expand and compress.
The band's Ben Gibbard and Dave Depper sent a request to go book shopping, so I dove into my mental Filofax to dig out the best darling independent stores and limited print run sellers.
ESPN is ending the print run of its eponymous magazine, a lush, large periodical that the sports media giant started more than two decades ago and is killing now because it is losing money.
LONDON, March 23 (Reuters) - London's Time Out, a food, drink and entertainment listings magazine, has rebranded as Time In and stopped its print run after coronavirus forced its usual readers to desert the streets.
"(It is) a proposal we have vehemently refused because it will subject us to submitting our editorial to voluntary censorship by a military command post," Tsedale said, without saying what the monthly print run was.
Those who are able to snag a copy of the game from its initial print run will also get an NFC-enabled Shadow Mewtwo amiibo card, which lets you unlock the character by scanning the card.
That's big talk for a quarterly with an initial print run of 300 copies and whose first issue mixes articles on economics and international affairs with more abstract offerings like a disquisition on Hegel and work.
As part of my job as editor of a literary publication here, I celebrated the arrival of "Lucy Negro, Redux" when it was published the first time, in a tiny print run from a tiny press.
A limited print run of the postcard will be available in packs of 10 along with a personal signed note from Clarkson to the first 250 people to donate $50 or more to It Gets Better Project.
The newspaper has printed around a million copies of the issue, up from a typical print run of about 100,13, and it includes drawings by illustrators who were killed in the attacks as well as guest contributions.
Echo Point is now running a Kickstarter campaign to raise $5,000 to pay for a small print run of the book: "Publish the book that Donald Trump doesn't want you to read," the pitch on Kickstarter says.
Helped in part by publicity over the government's decision to pull the grant, the initial print run of 1,000 copies quickly sold out, and now over 15,000 are in print in Singapore — a country of 5.6 million people.
The publisher also saw enough demand for It Can't Happen Here, Sinclair Lewis' 1935 satirical novel about an authoritarian president, to reissue a paperback edition in December—and then double down with a robust second print run in January.
Becoming had the biggest opening of any books in 2018 by Penguin Random House with 725,000 copies sold, according to the Associated Press, prompting the publisher to raise the book's print run from 1.8 million copies to 2.6 million.
The cover of the commemorative issue, which will be released on Wednesday and have an initial print run of a million copies, features a bearded man representing God with blood on his hands and a Kalashnikov on his back.
Since "Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone" came out in 1997, with a first print run of just 500 copies, the series of seven novels has sold 450 million copies worldwide in 79 languages and spawned a blockbuster movie franchise.
While it's arguable Holt should have known it had a big hit on its hands, all of the business practices of the publishing industry would have discouraged it from starting out with a print run big enough to accommodate current demand.
But during the pre-order period in January, more than 5,000 games sold in a week; the game is now on its third print run, with a total of 30,000 games in English, and 14,000 in various foreign-language editions.
TATWD will have an initial print run of 1.5 million (for context: the first printing of TFIOS consisted of 200,000 books, all of which Green signed), and proportionately more eyes on the bestselling author and his story of love, adventure, and mental illness.
The book, which explores how 19th-century British laws gave the government new ways to punish and criminalize same-sex relationships, was expected to go on sale in the United States on June 18, with an announced first print run of 35,000 copies.
Chozick's publisher announced an initial print run of 200,000 copies of the book, but according to NPD BookScan, which tracks 85 percent of industry book sales, Chozick ended up selling just 12,800 hardcover copies of her book over the past eight months.
Click here to view original GIFBringing the world one step closer to having real-life replicators like Star Trek promised, researchers at MIT's CSAIL lab have developed a new 3D printing technique that allows fully-functional robots to be created in a single print run.
In the United States, where "Six Four" will be released by Farrar, Straus and Giroux in Mr. Lloyd-Davies's translation, the publisher is planning an initial print run of 11,000 hardcover copies and hopes American audiences will be drawn to the discursive police drama.
Norton was able to get a small batch of books to sell at the events, before the first print run was ready, but at great cost: It involved taking unbound pages, gathering them by hand and having them bound and shipped overnight to the event sites.
Given the book's announced initial print run of 1503,000, it seems clear that Holt anticipated that Fire and Fury could be compared, in terms of sales, to Devil's Bargain, which has sold a respectable 50,000 copies in print since it was published in July according to Nielsen BookScan.
Last fall, taking cost-cutting measures, Condé Nast ended the regular print run of Teen Vogue and reduced the print frequency of other magazines in its stable, including Bon Appétit and W. The austerity plan at Condé Nast coincided roughly with the sale of the once-mighty Time Inc.
To give you a small sense of the discrepancy between Baldwin's actual contribution to our understanding of Trump and the financial windfall he has reaped, Baldwin and Kurt Anderson's forgettable You Can't Spell America Without Me had a significantly larger initial print run than Michael Wolff's mammoth bestseller Fire and Fury.
But over the next two decades, "Usha's Pickle Digest," self-published by an unknown author, with a first print run of just 0003,000, became a cult classic in India and its diaspora — praised for its precision and scope, celebrated on blogs and podcasts and hunted down in shops, where it sold out.
"Fils de la Nation," or "Son of the Nation," the first of two planned volumes of memoirs, shot to the top of Amazon's best-seller list last week, and the initial 50,000 print run has already sold out, says the publisher, Muller, a small right-wing house that took the book after more prestigious French publishers refused it.
The recognition that came with the scoop — as well as a string of high-profile stories in preceding years related to illegal phone hacking and the WikiLeaks trove of diplomatic cables — gave The Guardian outsize international influence, far beyond what is typically the case for a newspaper with an average weekday print run of around 146,000.
And the idea that it's somehow become impossible to criticize the veil is somewhat contradicted by the fact that this idea has been printed (in English, for maximum exposure) in Charlie Hebdo—a magazine that, let's not forget, has become almost the official pseudosatirical wing of the state, with the government directly financing its print run after the attack on its offices last year.

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