(1) Some plump for Your Love , with its distinctive keyboard figure that subsequently turned up both on Candi Staton and the Source's endlessly reissued and covered 1991 hit You Got The Love and, of all things, psychedelic rock band Animal Collective's My Girls.
(2) Beevor is also a fan, describing Zweig as "one of the greatest and most famous writers right across Europe in the 1930s", and saying that "now he's being reissued it certainly shows he hasn't dated", and that he is "still as fresh today".
(3) A spokeswoman for NS&I said it had an annual net financing target of £2bn, a figure which had increased in this year's budget allowing for the reissue of the certificates.
(4) The reissues of Eden , Love Not Money , Baby, The Stars Shine Bright and Idlewild are out now on Edsel Records
(5) The prize will lift Pamuk's already strong international reputation, and will no doubt lead to the reissuing of those titles of his that are currently out of print.
(6) Those who do not sign up could have their contract terminated and be automatically reissued with the new terms, according to consultation documents seen by the Guardian.
(7) "Warners own the rights to those albums, and our big fear was that one day we'd wake up and they'd have reissued them, without telling us.
(8) If no adverse effect is noted, the policy of not reissuing such units may need revision so that more units could be salvaged.
(9) He spent a period in the 1950s as jazz critic of the New Statesman, and published a Penguin Special, The Jazz Scene, on the subject in 1959 under the pen-name Francis Newton (many years later it was reissued with Hobsbawm identified as the author).
(10) But when the film was reissued in cinemas last autumn , I was curious to see it on the big screen.
(11) Then we got a phone call from someone who specialises in reissues, saying he wanted to put them out.
(12) The mad rush to reissue everything Elvis had ever recorded led to a worldwide shortage of the shellac needed for vinyl records, and Lust for Life was doomed by it.
(13) Things can sometimes go wrong – a 1961 Marcels record that appears in episode two sent US vinyl aficionados into a flurry when they spotted that it was on modern reissue label Eric.
(14) It was preceded by the novelty single The Laughing Gnome , a flop at the time but a top 10 hit when reissued in 1973.
(15) The role of the director of children's services itself has, in many ways, stayed, reassuringly, as it was envisaged in the Children Act 2004 that created the role, and this has been confirmed in the reissuing of the statutory guidance.
(16) A volume of memoirs, A Mug's Game (1972), was revised and reissued as String of Beginnings (1991).
(17) In Cold Blood is reissued this month by the Folio Society .
(18) Margareta van den Bosch, who dreamt up the H&M collaborations concept during a long tenure as head of design for H&M and now works as creative adviser to the brand, said the Wang collection broke new ground because “most pieces were developed from scratch, instead of reissuing archive pieces … Alex is one of the most important voices in fashion today … his designs are urban, wearable and covetable, offering a new take on an urban uniform … [he] has an inherent understanding of what people want to wear, and everything he does is with an energy and passion that’s infectious”.
(19) Labor has this afternoon reissued the key points of the treasury modelling for 2050 with a carbon price in place.
(20) LET IT BE.” Announced last week , the Definitely Maybe reissue is due to be released on 19 May.
Reprint
Definition:
(v. t.) To print again; to print a second or a new edition of.
(v. t.) To renew the impression of.
(n.) A second or a new impression or edition of any printed work; specifically, the publication in one country of a work previously published in another.
Example Sentences:
(1) The original 1858 edition of John Snow's On Chloroform and Other Anaesthetics, from which came the Wood Library-Museum of Anesthesiology reprints in 1971 and 1989, was donated to the Wood Library-Museum by Ralph Waters of Madison, Wisconsin, in 1967.
(2) Authors and publishers are requested to call attention to publications or to send reprints to the Gerontology Research Center, Baltimore City Hospitals, Baltimore, Maryland 21224.
(3) Before the cartoonists at Charlie Hebdo were slaughtered, their own provocations were not widely encouraged or reprinted.
(4) In this classic article, reprinted from the March 1952 issue of the American Journal of Nursing, Barbara K. Coleman, RN, and John P. Merrill, MD, describe the early artificial kidney, which was being used experimentally to treat acute renal failure.
(5) This article describes how to design and implement a filing system to make retrieval of reprints both quick and easy.
(6) The number of articles that came in the form of photocopies was directly proportional to the time interval between the publication and the reprint request.
(7) A reprint collection represents an investment of time, money, and resources.
(8) The Sunday Mirror reprinted Profumo's 'Darling' letter, while the News of the World famously photographed Keeler sitting naked astride a fashionably modern chair, an image that would come to epitomise the Swinging Sixties.
(9) Study of the qualitative and quantitative indicators of reprint smears from the surface of the upper respiratory mucosa in healthy infants and in these with acute respiratory viral infection has shown that migrating polymorphonuclear leukocytes take an active part in the functioning of the barrier of the upper respiratory mucosa at the early stages of human ontogenesis.
(10) In 2010 Swedish newspapers reprinted the controversial cartoon after two Muslim men were arrested and subsequently charged in the Irish Republic in connection with an alleged plot to murder Vilks.
(11) One that makes up its facts to the detriment of its readers and to all the publications that blindly reprint them.” I want to cheer at that.
(12) These books have quietly not been reprinted since the 1930s – or sell at inflated prices in dodgy editions at rightwing meetings across Europe .
(13) This month, prosecutors opened an inquiry into a newspaper that reprinted parts of the latest issue of Charlie Hebdo.
(14) A questionnaire was sent to each of the 457 persons who requested a reprint to determine how and why the request was made.
(15) The use of the MEDLINE computer retrieval system for retrieving relevant current articles is discussed in detail as is the proposed reorganization of the Center's reprint file.
(16) The brochure includes advertisements for the 10 Palmer resort restaurants, cafes and bars, as well as reprinting Palmer’s maiden speech and his business card.
(17) Ministers seem to be working hard to make their new police and crime commissioner elections a shambles – providing too little information, costly elections in cold dark November, the helpline not working , ballot papers reprinted .
(18) This book was appreciated for a long time so that in 1686 a nearly identical reprint was published.
(19) This paper describes the joint efforts of the Cleveland Poison Information Center and the Cleveland Health Sciences Library to develop a workable system for scanning the current journal literature for relevant articles on the therapy of poisonings and to develop a suitable system for reorganizing the present reprint files for the city's two units of the Poison Information Center.
(20) The guidelines, reprinted here, include the stipulations that "organs should be transplanted to the most appropriate recipient on the basis of medical and immunological criteria," that sharing of organs should be arranged by national or regional networks, and that transplant surgeons should not advertise.