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VOLUME |
Edition |
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COPY |
Edition |
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PUBLICATION |
Edition |
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ISSUE |
Edition |
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NEWSPAPER |
Morning edition |
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GRILL |
Copy, edition |
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DYED |
Coloured in handy edition |
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END |
Last of complete edition finished |
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MISEDITION |
An incorrect or spurious edition. |
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CREASED |
A little mediocre, as edition folded |
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TISSUE |
Thin paper is Middle Eastern edition |
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VERSION |
Hate not having a different edition |
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NEED |
Must have insert from June edition |
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UNUSED |
New section in The Sun (US edition) |
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BANKNOTE |
Ban knot on first edition of paper money |
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EXTRADITION |
Deportation based on letter deleted from extra edition |
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MATINEEIDOL |
Adaptation of lame edition featuring Tyrone Power, for example |
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AUDITIONS |
Tries out edition’s final message which goes for gold |
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REPRINT |
To print again; to print a second or a new edition of. |
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POSTHUMOUS |
Published after the death of the author; as, posthumous
works; a posthumous edition. |
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REVIEW |
To reconsider; to revise, as a manuscript before printing
it, or a book for a new edition. |
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VARIORUM |
Containing notes by different persons; -- applied to a
publication; as, a variorum edition of a book. |
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EDITION |
The whole number of copies of a work printed and published
at one time; as, the first edition was soon sold. |
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IMPROVEMENT |
The state of being improved; betterment; advance;
also, that which is improved; as, the new edition is an improvement on
the old. |
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HEXAPLA |
A collection of the Holy Scriptures in six languages or
six versions in parallel columns; particularly, the edition of the Old
Testament published by Origen, in the 3d century. |