Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

140 Sentences With "printing presses"

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

Keeping up with the printing presses can be daunting. Sorry.
Above, the newspaper's printing presses in Phnom Penh in February.
The iron rumble of the printing presses is never far away.
In that scenario, Frankfurt's printing presses will be fired up again.
Handing control of the printing presses to the president would be unwise.
Murdoch moved his printing presses away to Wapping in the late '80s.
The police raided printing presses at four major newspapers around 2 a.m.
And there were steam-powered printing presses, which made the book more affordable.
Truck-sized printing presses were a hassle to set up, maintain, and clean.
Some central bankers seem to be preparing their whirlybirds (and their printing presses).
And last year The Herald's cherished printing presses were sold for $34 million.
Each of the seven printing presses at the plant is several stories tall.
Printing presses are few, and high-quality paper stock is hard to find.
In a narrow sense, they are a monetary phenomenon, with printing presses running nonstop.
But he has not actually locked up opponents or sent thugs to smash printing presses.
First is Sedition Act, second is penal code, third is Printing Presses and Publications Act.
The basement, however, looks much like it did when the newspaper's printing presses still rumbled.
Failing that - and continuing to rely on printing presses - is a way to a blind alley.
Ditching its own printing presses and going tabloid will help, saving several million pounds a year.
Here is a continent of astonishingly versatile Renaissance men, hyperactive printing presses and dangerous new religious ideas.
Contrary to popular belief, and even current Fed policy, government money does not grow on printing presses.
The printing presses for response forms, the Census Bureau says, are scheduled to start running on July 1.
This would be the first time in over 25 years that Somalia's printing presses have been fired up.
Even before the dawn of modern printing presses, journalists, scientists, scholars, and others have been writing about epidemics.
All we have left, then, are the digital money printing presses — for now, as Washington's popular saying goes.
Because newspapers owned the printing presses, local businesses had no choice but to take out ads in their pages.
If successful, Medium might operate the way some printing presses worked, servicing the needs of a variety of publications.
Perhaps if this was still an era where industry made printing presses, cameras, and recorders that would be reasonable.
One of the oldest medieval woodcuts features skeletons at lead printing presses, denoting the deadly damage of their work.
We have just as strong a moral duty to "leave" our mouths, pens, pencils, telephones, printing presses, videos, etc.
The article also referred incorrectly to the location of printing presses at The International Herald Tribune building in Paris.
Inflation will always respond, eventually, to a determined policymaker who has access to interest rates and the printing presses.
If it could, then the best policy would be to simply run the money printing presses day and night.
Her father, William, manufactured printing presses at a plant owned by her grandfather and sold real estate and insurance.
They might want to leave the printing presses alone, but cannot credibly make a promise to voters to do so.
To finance the government's domestic bills, Mr Maduro has revved up the printing presses, setting off a bout of hyperinflation.
The Guardian has not yet decided what it will do with the printing presses and land in London and Manchester.
The Patriots' near monopoly on American printing presses meant that reports of British and Hessian cruelty spread and survived disproportionately.
According to Lapinksi, the church accommodated the schedules of people working in these printing presses by hosting 2 a.m. services. 
The printing presses had only just started turning when the media finally started to run with the story in late October.
To the left stood Evelyn Richter's quiet, photographic documentation of women caught in the drudgery of spinning mills and printing presses.
On July 18th Fairfax said that it would share printing presses with News Corporation, Rupert Murdoch's company and its biggest rival.
Without sufficient money coming in, the country had to rely on its printing presses in an attempt to maintain living standards.
Any fiscal slippage would mean Japan keeping its money printing presses running longer, and would break a commitment to G20 countries.
Newspapers were printing presses of gold, in no small part because most operated as near monopolies in most cities and towns.
To speak effectively, people have to spend money — on things like paper and pencils, signs, computers, printing presses, and broadcast facilities.
I could tell you stories about the coming of cheaper printing presses and what it did to Grover Cleveland's sex life.
The older structure, built in 1912, has a tower that once pumped water to cool the printing presses in the basement.
Even then, it can be many more months until they roll off the printing presses into your local latte-serving bookstore.
As a human who owes her main livelihood to actual printing presses, spacing on Johannes Gutenberg himself is a bit embarrassing.
They were produced on the same heavy, expensive, restricted intaglio printing presses used by the US Bureau of Engraving and Printing.
Seeking popular approval, it sent the printing presses into overdrive, hoping to inflate away the value of these secret piles of wealth.
In the offline world, he explains, power and profits accrue to firms that control distribution, such as printing presses and cable networks.
The newspaper printing presses may have another decade of life in them, New York Times CEO Mark Thompson told CNBC on Monday.
Also held hostage in the studio are two of Lorenz's own printing presses and a 211-year archive of her personal work.
While criticizing the governments' economic policies, the ECB is clearly implying that its printing presses will remain in overdrive for the foreseeable future.
Newspaper headlines interrupt action sequences throughout Honda's original film, as do the sounds of printing presses, news wires, and other signals relaying news.
Luther was responsible for more than a fifth of the entire output of pamphlets from the empire's newfangled printing presses during the 1520s.
They worked together for some twenty years at her brownstone in Chelsea, where she had two small printing presses on the lower level.
But smaller firms across industries - textile houses, printing presses, rubber manufacturers, real estate agencies and others - are not racing to diversify just yet.
"We will not start on a path of turning printing presses on and unbalancing the economy - measures that bring catastrophic consequences," Medvedev wrote.
The authorities demanded $6m in unpaid taxes and when it was not paid, seized the paper's assets, including its offices and printing presses.
The Vibe A decade ago, printing presses started giving way to media companies like the public radio station WNYC, at 53 Varick Street.
It created an antitrust exemption that kept multiple news outlets operating in some major cities while they shared printing presses and ad sales departments.
In England, the broad diffusion of printing presses and mirrors led to the bloody and ultimately failed anti-monarchical revolution led by Oliver Cromwell.
After spending more than it collected for so long that no sane person would willingly lend to it, the regime cranked up the printing presses.
Despite central banks' efforts to create inflation by running currency printing presses overtime, this money is ultimately only worth the paper it is printed on.
These include the Printing Presses and Publications Act 1984, the Communications and Multimedia Act 1998, the Sedition Act 1948 and the Official Secrets Act 1972.
He got the idea for the ballpoint pen from newspaper printing presses, which dried much more quickly than fountain pen ink by using a rolling cylinder.
They were usually painted by hand onto sacks or canvas, as large printing presses couldn't be imported during Ghana's military dictatorships of the 1970s and '80s.
"Both RBI and government have been getting the printing presses to work at capacity to get the new notes available to meet demand," he told PTI.
But knowledge and communication about the virus was limited by the technologies of the era; telegrams and printing presses were the norm, radios only just emerging.
Finally, just outside of the city, Carson has the International Printing Museum where visitors can see an impressive collection of antique printing presses; admission is $10.
Over the past seven years, the distinguishing feature of monetary policy in the industrialized economies has been the massive resort to their central banks' printing presses.
Aging demographics, increasing entitlements, massive budget deficits and burgeoning amounts of debt will force the Federal Reserve and other central banks to keep printing presses running hot.
A humanist scholar and teacher, born about 1450 in an obscure village south of Rome, Aldo was studying in the city when the first printing presses arrived.
If all this new debt is to be justified and dismissed by cranking up the money printing presses, it is inconceivable that significant inflation will not result.
And nearly 90% of respondents also expected the ECB to announce the restarting of its money printing presses, with monthly purchases of 30 billion euros from October.
By quickly turning up the printing presses, global central banks would need to provide reserves at a faster rate than the collapse in the velocity of money.
Finance ministry sources say they plan to reissue just over half of this - a task that would take months given the capacity of India's four banknote printing presses.
The central bank also stepped up a commitment to stoking annual inflation of 2 percent, vowing to keep the printing presses whirring until it actually overshoots that goal.
West Coast newspapers like the Seattle Times and the San Francisco Chronicle are being published completely remotely, with the big exception being the workers at the printing presses.
In Southern California, distribution of The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal was also delayed, because all of the papers rely on the same back-end printing presses.
All it's got, figuratively speaking, are the Federal Reserve's printing presses – as long as the expected cost and price outlook allows the central bank to keep reasonably anchored inflation expectations.
Japan would do well to patch up its vitally important relations with Beijing; that would do more for its economy than all the money printing presses and the cheap yen policies.
From millions of sources all over the globe, through every possible channel and medium — light waves, airwaves, ticker tapes, computer banks, telephone wires, television cables, satellites, printing presses — information pours in.
Without the need to buy or rent printing presses, digital publishers can start with "sweat equity alone", says Janine Warner of SembraMedia, an NGO that helps Latin American journalists become entrepreneurs.
It also means that the First Amendment freedom of the press applies to freedom of expression via broadcasting and the internet and not just to freedom of expression via printing presses.
The neighborhood was once home to printing presses and other manufacturers, but has been reinvented as a thriving commercial area with more than 353,235 companies, many in technology, media and advertising.
While the first printing presses arrived in the Middle East within decades of Gutenberg's prototype — the quintessential disruptive technology — Ottoman bureaucrats allegedly outlawed any printing of Arabic text, by penalty of death.
The pain is felt most among small businessmen like Walid Riad, who imports and resells used printing presses and stopped trading two months ago, unable to meet new import rules or get forex.
Since then, the printing presses have churned out more than $40 billion in currency, but the government was initially forced to limit A.T.M. withdrawals to 2,000 rupees, or about $30, at a time.
On top of that, the seemingly bottomless appetite among readers for a handful of blockbuster titles has tightened the bottleneck at the printing presses, consuming what little slack there was in the system.
Now, it will move to a tabloid format and will be published on printing presses owned by Trinity Mirror, the British publishing company that owns The Daily Mirror, a traditional left-wing tabloid.
BRASILIA (Reuters) - Brazil's central bank could soon be forced to fire up the money printing presses if the coronavirus-fueled recession facing Latin America's largest economy is as devastating as some economists fear.
Meanwhile, the United States continues to crank the printing presses at its plants in Washington and Fort Worth and to distribute dollars from licensed warehouses in financial centers including London, Frankfurt and Singapore.
If so, policymakers in Japan, euro zone and United States, who are readying interest rate cuts and dusting off the money-printing presses, may end up with a costly error on their hands.
The clash threatens to tarnish the golden rule of developed financial systems for the past three decades: keep the money-printing presses away from elected politicians if you want to keep inflation in check.
Prior to the internet, and especially before social platforms, the media was dominated by large entities who operated massive production and distribution systems that were required to gain reach: satellites, transmitters, printing presses, etc.
In old printing presses, metal plates got coated in colored inks, and the key plate, which usually had the darkest ink on it, is what provided all the detail and contrast to the image.
Better printing presses and transportation made publishing newspapers more economical, and the average American household read more than three newspapers in the time frame from 1910 to 1930, up from 0.9 in the 19703s.
Newspapers require buying newsprint by the ton, ink by the barrel, hugely expensive printing presses and trucks to distribute them, not to mention paying the many carriers needed to deliver them to your home.
Until he decided that the Fed should roll those printing presses to help Trump, he was part of a fairly broad group that advocated tight money in the aftermath of the global financial crisis.
The last time Zimbabwe had its own currency, a decade ago, Mugabe's government turned on the printing presses to fund higher salaries for government workers and curry favour with the military - with disastrous economic results.
The move cost £80 million, because The Guardian was the only British newspaper to print in that size and it had to construct new printing sites in London and Manchester with specially commissioned printing presses.
The Bank of Japan and the Bank of Canada were the latest major central banks to signal the chance of a future rate cut, after the European Central Bank restarted its printing presses last month.
But he found that the circular symbol was too blurry when reproduced on high-speed printing presses; instead he developed a rectangular design, with 95 bits of data in binary code containing consumer product information.
There is a glorious sequence in which one of the key reporters, played with hangdog nobility by Bob Odenkirk, is tapping at his typewriter late at night when the printing presses rumble into action down below.
Britain's economy is expected to slide back into recession in the coming year following its vote to leave the EU, pushing the Bank of England to cut interest rates and restart its printing presses next month.
I recall how, when working late some nights that first year, rumbling vibrations in the building at 229 West 43rd Street would signal that the printing presses several floors below were turning today's news into newsprint.
Other central banks such as the Bank of England and Bank of Canada have already raised interest rates and the ECB is widely expected to shut down its money printing presses by the end of 2018.
The limit is also designed to protect against legal challenges by critics who say the bond buying is illegal because the central bank is barred by law from using its printing presses to finance eurozone governments.
In all likelihood, if central banks keep the printing presses running, that's just going to force bond yields down further, which will help support speculative assets elsewhere, including junk bonds," Minerd said on Wednesday's "Closing Bell.
The digital company saddled with its own ad tech, sales team and expensive offices designed to woo brand clients may begin to get a sneaking sympathy for the newspapers who bemoaned their printing presses a decade before.
Since March however, the economy, grappling with a devastating drought, has faced a shortage of notes, unnerving depositors who fear the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) turning on the printing presses again will make their cash worthless.
In the more than 500 years since printing presses began turning out pamphlets and news sheets, markets were spawned for journalism, advocacy and propaganda – concepts that were not, and still in many places still are not, differentiated.
We've eliminated all meetings focused on print, and we pursue a 24/7 strategy of publishing stories at the exact moment the readers most want them, not when we happen to be turning on the printing presses.
It's to transform the Times' digital subscriptions into the main engine of a billion-dollar business, one that could pay to put reporters on the ground in 174 countries even if (OK, when) the printing presses stop forever.
Solving the more than decade-long debt battle would enable Argentina to return to global credit markets and stop financing the deficit with the printing presses, a tactic which helped fuel double digit inflation under the previous government.
Their CMYK (that's cyan, magenta, yellow, and black — the colors all their hues are mixed from) Guides are essential in the graphic design world, providing information on how to best reproduce swatches on computers, printing presses and more.
In the first episode of State of Repair, we visited the Times to meet Zerafa, Greaney, and Chris Bedetto, who are part of a team of machinists that keeps the New York Times's eight three-story printing presses humming.
MUMBAI, April 27 (Reuters) - Having speeded up printing presses to refill banks' empty ATMs in some parts of the country, the Reserve Bank of India released data on Wednesday showing that people were still hoarding cash as withdrawals outpaced spending.
Lexicographers researched and published dictionaries and thesauruses, and the printing presses — under pressure from capitalism's dictates — created rich shelves of books filled with the stories and myths of peoples who just a few decades ago didn't "exist" in the mind's eye.
The last time Zimbabwe had its own currency, a decade ago, Mugabe's government was able to turn on the printing presses to fund higher salaries for government workers, curry favour with the military and pay political opponents - with disastrous economic consequences.
Some big publishers have been investing in print infrastructure and inventory management in recent years, expanding their warehouses and improving their ability to refill orders from retailers quickly, but they have little control over the printing presses, where capacity has shrunk.
They had two printing presses in their small apartment in Jamaica, Queens, that allowed them to collaborate creatively on greeting cards, stationery, books and illustrated holiday messages that quoted people as diverse as Neil Armstrong and the poet Heinrich Heine.
The comic was banned under the Printing Presses and Publication Act, meaning that anyone found guilty of printing, importing, producing, publishing, selling or distributing it faces up to three years in prison and a fine of up to 20,000 Malaysian ringgit ($4,775).
And yet the financial contagion associated with risk of an unprecedented euro exit ripped through Ireland, Italy, Spain and Portugal - eventually forcing ECB president Mario Draghi to do "whatever it takes" and fire up the bank's money printing presses to calm the storm.
For centuries, traditional Arabic calligraphers had steadfastly refused to apply their skills to the creation of movable type, so the calligraphic never became fully typographic in the way, say, the handwriting of Medieval monks was transformed into standardized letters used on printing presses.
Running the printing presses to fight a depression, as the Fed did after the financial crisis, is prudent and sensible; running them because you refuse to accept the reality that your policies aren't delivering an economic miracle is different, and always ends badly.
But what should be good news for publishers, agents and authors has created headaches during the crucial holiday sales season, as printing presses struggle to keep up with a surge in demand, creating a backlog that has led to stock shortages of popular titles.
Emma Seppala was working as an intern at The International Herald Tribune (the past iteration of The International New York Times) one summer in college in Paris, shuttling between the newsroom writers and editors on the second floor and the workers at printing presses in the basement.
Another is to give central banks a fiscal tool that does not try to redistribute money, and hence does not invite a feeding frenzy at the printing presses—by, say, transferring an equal amount into the bank account of every adult citizen when the economy slumps.
I've been long interested in the political cartoon—both the ones that we grew up with as well as the 1800s when it was more related to history painting and it was sort of part of the way they were showing off their colored printing presses in the news media.
However, he was at the heart of its decline when in 1986 he moved his newspaper stable, which by then also included the Times and Sunday Times broadsheets and the Sun tabloid, to a new purpose-built operation in east London, where new technology replaced the hot metal printing presses.
Mr. Rosen's legacy can also be found in orbit: in the approximately 600 geostationary satellites that today handle all manner of communication data, such as television signals and telephone and internet connections, sending, among other things, these very words, by way of printing presses or digital devices, directly to readers.
LIKE the governors of the Reichsbank, who kept on speeding up the printing presses as Germany plunged into ever-steepening hyperinflation in the 1920s, insisting that the real problem was a shortage of banknotes, Zimbabwe's government claimed to have overturned the laws of economics during its own bout of hyperinflation nearly a decade ago.
Sure, people are lending to a AAA borrower, but they are ignoring its rising budget deficits (5 percent of GDP), public debt ($20 trillion, and counting, or 104 percent of GDP at this writing) and absence of any credible policies to stop and reverse America's increasing recourse to global savings and the Fed's printing presses.
Those who missed the moral significance Dr. Chapin found in the beauty of the graphics, chandeliers, steam-driven pumps, silks, sculptures, guns, cameras, clocks, printing presses and even a device that measured a ticket-holder's lung capacity — and expected life span — can catch a fleeting glimpse of what was America's first World's Fair, now through July 21858 at the Bard Graduate Center Gallery in Manhattan.
On top of all of this it has now long been argued that RSD is detrimental to smaller independent labels and artists because the sheer mass of releases that major labels are putting out for RSD are getting prioritized and clogging up the printing presses for months at a time, effectively meaning small labels aren't able to put out releases for chunks of the year—creating an obvious knock-on effect.

No results under this filter, show 140 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.