offprint


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  • noun

Synonyms for offprint

a separately printed article that originally appeared in a larger publication

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Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
Industrial producers are aiming to re-engineer their end-to-end processes, shifting from production maximization to a life-cycle material approach that minimizes the environmental offprint, adding value to products through usability.
The dedication to Alessandro de Medici is dated 'sei di Febraio 1567, and states: "Accettate adunque li dono, che io ui faccio di quest a uita a ben uolontieri.' In it, Vasari also explained his reason for the offprint: 'ma perche molti vorrano essa uita del Buonarruoto sola, e separata dall'altre, ci e parso per sodisfare a ciascun o, farne stampare alcun numero fuori di quelle, che sono nell'intero dell'opera, e si compiaccia a chi o non vorra, o non potra hauere tutto il libro insieme.' See exemplar of this Vita de' gran Michelagnolo Buonarroti, published in 1568, at the National Gallery of Art 1991.13.2, Washington, D.C.
Inserted in the offprint is a signed typed letter from Frances Yates (1899-1981), the eminent scholar of Bruno (1548-1600) and Renaissance mysticism.
He is Alejandro Stern, known to his many clients and friends as "the jungle buyer," and you may read about him in Michael Wachtler's article in the October 2009 issue of Lapis (an English-language offprint of this article, available from Jeff Fast, is called "The Jungle Buyer").
(70) From "Erziehungs-Verein," offprint from Salzunger Tageblatt Nr.
International Journal for the Semiotics of Law/Revue internationale de semiotique juridique (Dragan Milovanovic) All tables of contents, with abstracts and offprint offers where available.
Offprint from Norsk Tidsskrift for Sprogvidenskap 18:118-136.
This report, which is also available as a separate offprint, was prepared by the Center for the Study of Global Christianity at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, South Hamilton, Massachusetts.
(9.) Tolstoy owned a bound copy of an offprint of Gershenzon's biography of Pecherin from the journal Haynnoe cnoeo.
Among the thousands of books he left, I found on his shelves late one night an offprint of Rene Char's wartime Resistance notebooks, which he'd translated.
An early offprint without plates on the classification of the platypus in the form of a letter and conceived as a response to E'tienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire.
Music Printing and Publishing was an offprint of work on the New Grove Dictionary of Music.
The same is true of Perowne's subsequent ruse of reading aloud from a medical offprint "casting doubt on the surgical lesioning of the globus pallidus in the treatment of Parkinson's Disease" (226), making it pass for a hopeful commentary on the baffled Baxter's own, unrelated genetic disorder.