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mimeograph

[mim-ee-uh-graf, -grahf] / ˈmɪm i əˌgræf, -ˌgrɑf /












Example Sentences

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The book concludes with Jophan's discovery of "The Magic Mimeograph" which "… will produce the Perfect Fanzine … and now the song of the trumpets filled the air, ringing across Trufandom to the far mountains".

From The Guardian • Aug. 13, 2012

Mimeograph machines were easy enough for school children to use, and affordable enough for counterculture artists to buy.

From National Geographic

He was also pointing up an old Washington custom: ghostwriters had become as much a part of the furniture of modern government as the Mimeograph machine.

From Time Magazine Archive

“Writers who sought new ways and languages took charge of their own publication,” says poet Jerome Rothenberg in his book about the Mimeograph Revolution.

From National Geographic

Mimeograph, mim′ē-ō-graf, n. an apparatus in which a thin fibrous paper coated with paraffin is used as a stencil for reproducing copies of written or printed matter.—v.t. to reproduce such by this means.

From Chambers's Twentieth Century Dictionary (part 2 of 4: E-M) by Various




Vocabulary lists containing mimeograph


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