Home
Idioms
Top 1000 Words
Top 5000 Words


Example sentences for "stereotyping"

Lexicographically close words:
stereoscope; stereoscopic; stereotype; stereotyped; stereotypes; steril; sterile; steriles; sterilisation; sterilise
  1. Though very little English printing is done here, a number of good Portuguese daily newspapers are published, the offices being equipped with linotype machines, web presses and stereotyping machinery.

  2. The invention of stereotyping is also a great improvement in printing.

  3. The process of stereotyping differs from common printing, in that the letters, after being set up, are cast in plates of entire pages, from plaster of Paris moulds.

  4. China, our ancestor in invention, from remote ages had a kind of stereotyping or printing.

  5. We have got just as far, in fact, as when the plaster in stereotyping was ready to receive the casting.

  6. Every line of matter which appears in any modern daily newspaper has to pass through two processes of stereotyping before it makes a beginning to effect its final work of printing upon paper.

  7. Here he was occupied with a stereotyping process, suggested by what he had read about the art as perfected in England by Earl Stanhope.

  8. Besides the works connected with his printing-office, Mr. Clowes found it necessary to cast his own types, to enable him to command on emergency any quantity; and to this he afterwards added stereotyping on an immense scale.

  9. This new method of newspaper stereotyping was originally employed on the cylinders of the Applegath and Hoe Presses.

  10. Here he obtained three partners, in conjunction with whom he entered into a contract with the University of Cambridge for stereotyping Bibles and prayer-books.

  11. Something akin to stereotyping is another method of printing, called logography, invented by John Walter of the London Times, in 1783, and for which he took out a patent.

  12. To the art of stereotyping the public is mainly indebted for cheap literature, for when the plates are once produced the chief expense is disposed of.

  13. But the time had not come; for without a very large demand, such as could not exist in those days, stereotyping would be of no advantage.

  14. This stereotyping was proposed to save time, labour, and expense in the preparation of new editions of such a general catalogue.

  15. The first part related to the stereotyping of catalogues by separate titles in a uniform style.

  16. Wood Engraving and the Stereotype In any event, wood engraving did not really flourish until a practical stereotyping process was perfected.

  17. The Penny Magazine and the Saturday Magazine, founded in 1832, immediately made use of Genoux's stereotyping process.

  18. Heraldry generally finds some way of stereotyping one of its creations as peculiarly its own, and in regard to the elephant, the curious "elephant and castle" (Fig.

  19. But the multiplication of English crests in number, all of which as granted are required to differ, has naturally resulted in the stereotyping of points of difference in attitude, &c.

  20. The plan of stereotyping the titles, separately, would be of great value to every increasing library, independent of any general system.

  21. A plan for stereotyping catalogues of libraries by separate titles, in a uniform style.

  22. A plan for stereotyping catalogues of libraries by separate, movable titles of the books contained in them, and, 2.

  23. We may, therefore, in using a title transcribed from one copy of a book, for other copies, avoid trouble by preparing and stereotyping a new title for every distinct edition; treating new editions as new books.

  24. The plan of stereotyping titles, separately, suggested the following system for the accomplishment of this important purpose: 1.

  25. The force of the former consideration is much diminished by the plan of stereotyping the titles.

  26. In concluding these details of the system of stereotyping catalogues, by separate titles, it now remains to say a few words upon the method of employing the titles, in the construction of new catalogues.

  27. This book has been stereotyped by a process entirely new, peculiarly adapted to the stereotyping of separate titles, or even single lines.

  28. There is a branch of this invention which promises to furnish us with the means of engraving, with facility, any desired characters, and of stereotyping them from the engraved plates.

  29. The necessity of this rule arises from the stereotyping of the titles separately.

  30. In Egypt it conforms more or less exactly to the general stereotyping of life.

  31. Jimmy, being of a mechanical turn of mind, was very much interested in the stereotyping process, and more particularly in the account they received of the way in which many daily papers are printed.

  32. When the proofs have been corrected and the "revise" submitted to the author, and his corrections made, the process of stereotyping comes in.

  33. Hearing of the new process of stereotyping in England, he went over there to learn about it.

  34. Since they must duplicate the plates sent to them by the stereotyping process, your expensively prepared advertisement, if it is to appear sharp and clean in the valuable space it uses, should be electrotyped by your plate-maker.

  35. Lambinet, who is responsible for this suggestion, explains that this method really means an early adoption of the stereotyping process.

  36. Early in the nineteenth century, Earl Stanhope, of England, re-introduced Ged's stereotyping process with many improvements.

  37. These and other experiments, however, were leading to the real stereotyping process which developed later.

  38. For job-work stereotyping the casting-box is flat, and the molten metal is either poured by hand or automatically pumped in the casting-box.

  39. Stereotyping was for many years the chief means of making plates for books and also for commercial printing.

  40. The big advantage of stereotyping in this connection lies in the fact that it is the quickest method of producing a solid, duplicate printing plate from an original molding form.

  41. The large daily newspapers are entirely dependent upon the stereotyping process for the necessary speed required in production.

  42. In stereotyping an impression in plastic material is made of the type face and then a casting is made from this impression which, of course, exactly duplicates the type face.

  43. Then there was "imminent danger of stereotyping instead of progressing.

  44. The General Register would not raise the profession of nursing; it would do an injury to the better nurses by putting them on a level with the worse, and to the profession by stereotyping a minimum standard.

  45. The last form has gone to the stereotyping room,” he remarked almost casually.

  46. Between two slender spars hung the rubber encased package of matrices that twenty-one minutes and seventeen seconds before, had come hot and steaming from the stereotyping room of the Evening Telegram.

  47. For if the individual with propensities toward moral obliquity is to be saved to society it must be through the stereotyping effects of good habits.

  48. The page is made up on a portable slab of iron, upon which it is sent to the stereotyping room.

  49. A Plan for Stereotyping Catalogues by Separate Titles, and for forming a General Stereotyped Catalogue of Public Libraries in the United States.

  50. A very ingenious scheme for the stereotyping of catalogue titles was published by Mr. C.

  51. Cartwright's was designed by the Editor to follow "Cotton is King," but the copy was not received until the stereotyping had progressed nearly to completion.

  52. Since the completion of the stereotyping of the volume, and just as it was about ready for the press, the New York Herald, of January 5, reached us.

  53. Stringfellow, but the copy was not received until the stereotyping had progressed nearly to the close of the volume.

  54. Conversely, selection may tend to preserve those individuals which perform some intelligent action, and may, therefore, aid the lapsing of intelligence in establishing and stereotyping an instinct.

  55. Any individually acquired increment, either in the intelligence displayed or the stereotyping process.

  56. Other modes of stereotyping have been introduced, but not one has attained to the popularity of the method we have just described.

  57. Their lives are spent in working for the blind; he editing magazines and stereotyping Braille books, and she proof reading and seeing to household affairs.

  58. He thoroughly understands the mechanism of the machines he uses, and has devised many improvements to Braille stereotyping machines, and one of great importance to the "Picht" typewriter, which is now being adopted by the makers.

  59. Passing the stereotyping department, the girls entered the press room where slumbered ten giant double-decked rotary presses.

  60. Then I'll haul it over to your plant for stereotyping and the press run.


  61. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "stereotyping" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.