What's the difference between typo and typographer?
Typo
Definition:
(n.) A compositor.
Example Sentences:
(1) Tennis Australia apologises for Bernard Tomic 'Hall of Shame' typo Read more When police arrived they allegedly told him he was being evicted from the hotel and gave him a trespass warning.
(2) Photograph: The Guardian “Tennis Australia sincerely apologises for the typo in the daily results service today,” the statement said.
(3) The messages are littered with typos, apparently the result of overzealous autocorrect settings, said Carlos Marín, director of Milenio, in an accompanying editorial.
(4) He suggested that it was "a typo, to be perfectly honest".
(5) Now I'd love to stay and chat all night, but unfortunately I have to correct all the typos in this report, insert gags where appropriate and remove all the bits where I slagged off Steven Gerrard, who is about to lift the Champions League trophy for Liverpool.
(6) Sounders official matchday Twitter account is claiming that having Shalrie Joseph listed as a forward for the Sounders is not a typo.
(7) No, that's not a typo for 'Steve Nash's back' This has been a strange week for injury news.
(8) But the obvious answer is the correct one: a typo renamed young striker Tommy Wright for the day.
(9) "I do remember finding my first typo when I was about five," she says.
(10) Unable to admit that his boss had been guilty of a simple typo, spokesman Sean Spicer – who back in January had pretended a small crowd was bigger than a big crowd – declared that “ The president and a small group of people know exactly what he meant ”.
(11) Ed Miliband makes a typo, Twitter eats itself Typos are par for the course on Twitter, of course.
(12) Mike Bergen (@BergenCapital) Hearing talks with troika break down again; troika negotiators walk out of meeting with labour minister October 16, 2012 Matt O'Brien (@ObsoleteDogma) Typo.
(13) But all this hardly makes a typo a trend; if it did, a whole lot of us are in trouble.
(14) Our deepest apologizes [sic] for the earlier typo.” The apology was subsequently corrected , and the first apology tweet deleted.
(15) Apologies for the earlier typo, and many thanks to the rival journalist - and baerchen below - for flagging it up.
(16) Those of you unfortunate enough to have seen the ads will know that we're all invited to a party with Jim White and Natalie Sawyer - BYOBB (the extra b's a typo) - to celebrate wildly as Peter Crouch completes a last-minute move to QPR.
(17) Conservative MP Philip Lee, who is a doctor, queried the government's claim that full compensation would cost £3bn, which he said was based on a "typo".
(18) But like many of you I’m hoping the game itself will do the job and keep my eyes open and the typos at bat bay.
(19) Then leave us all with 20yrs immense health bills.” Murdoch’s Twitter stream is also an endless source of typos and auto-correct fails.
(20) Click here to watch Mortdecai trailer The trailer shows a luxuriously moustached Depp travelling to Los Angeles, described as "a terribly vulgar place" and taking part in traditional aristocratic pastimes such as shooting peasants (no typo).
Typographer
Definition:
(n.) A printer.
Example Sentences:
(1) The research reported here comprises an empirical investigation of the phenomenon of typographic allusion.
(2) The reference to SAD is understood to be a typographical error for SAS.
(3) However, we voluntarily disclose our more than 300,000 donors and post our audited financial statements on our website along with the 990s for anyone to see.” Separately, the Clinton Health Access Initiative (Chai), the foundation’s flagship programme, is refiling its form 990s for at least two years, 2012 and 2013, a Chai spokeswoman, Maura Daley, said, describing the incorrect government grant break-outs for those two years as typographical errors.
(4) A remarkably good typographic trade gave the prerequisite for this development, in which prominent individual examples are particularly emphasized.
(5) • This article was amended on 12 March to correct two minor typographical errors.
(6) The validation program detects all errors of a typographical nature and all commonly possible logical errors.
(7) The reference to SAD is understood to be a typographical error for SAS, which is referred to later in the letter.
(8) A hardboard sign, for example, for “directions to press and for diplomats” is rendered typographically perfect for 1961 Jerusalem.
(9) Instead of typing in commands, the user directs the program by making selections with the mouse, thereby eliminating most typographical and syntax errors.
(10) Because of an apparent typographic error in a US patent, there has been some confusion as to the acute oral toxicity of danthron and danthron in combination with dioctyl sodium sulfosuccinate (DSS).
(11) Two hypotheses concerning the development of skill at identifying typographically transformed words were tested.
(12) European diplomats professed surprise at the inclusion of the peak emissions reference, even suggesting that a typographical mistake had been made.
(13) This article has been amended to correct a typographical error in the penultimate paragraph
(14) • This article was amended on 13 February 2012 to correct a typographical error which saw the party Laos spelled as Loas.
(15) Error trapping for typographical errors is provided.
(16) The revealed possible predisposing factors were: a prolonged use of analgetics, contact with formalin and typographical dyes, systematic alcohol usage, frequent catarrhal diseases with long-term fever, a history of acute renal destructive process.
(17) It was found that both structural and typographic eidetic imagery were correlated with measures of synaesthesia, indicating a relationship between the two phenomena.
(18) The Rwandan genocide took place in 1994, not 1984, as a typographical error originally said in the article above.
(19) The revised column, with the headline: We are Closer than Ever Before to Our Dreams, was about half the length of the original, brazenly pro-Communist and laden with factual and typographical errors.
(20) Items encoded by typographical attributes were more readily recalled at 02.00 than at 18.00, whereas semantically encoded words were less well recalled at night than during the day.