Print vs Bomb - What's the difference?
print | bomb |
print
Of, relating to, or writing for printed publications.
To produce one or more copies of a text or image on a surface, especially by machine; often used with out'' or ''off : print out, print off.
To produce a microchip (an integrated circuit) in a process resembling the printing of an image.
(ambitransitive) To write very clearly, especially, to write without connecting the letters as in cursive.
(ambitransitive) To publish in a book, newspaper, etc.
* Alexander Pope
To stamp or impress (something) with coloured figures or patterns.
To fix or impress, as a stamp, mark, character, idea, etc., into or upon something.
* Surrey
* Sir John Beaumont
* Roscommon
To stamp something in or upon; to make an impression or mark upon by pressure, or as by pressure.
* Dryden
(uncountable) Books and other material created by printing presses, considered collectively or as a medium.
(uncountable) Clear handwriting, especially, writing without connected letters as in cursive.
(uncountable) The letters forming the text of a document.
A visible impression on a surface.
A fingerprint.
A footprint.
(visual art) A picture that was created in multiple copies by printing.
(photography) A photograph that has been printed onto paper from the negative.
(motion pictures) A copy of a film that can be projected.
Cloth that has had a pattern of dye printed onto it.
An explosive device used or intended as a weapon.
* 2008 , Sidney Gelb, Foreign Service Agent ,
# (label) The atomic bomb.
# (label) Events or conditions that have a speedy destructive effect.
#*{{quote-magazine, date=2014-04-25, author=
, volume=190, issue=20, page=13, magazine=(The Guardian Weekly)
, title= (label) A failure; an unpopular commercial product.
* 1997 , Eric L. Flom, Chaplin in the Sound Era: An Analysis of the Seven Talkies ,
* 2010 , (Tony Curtis), (Peter Golenbock), American Prince: My Autobiography ,
* 2011 , Elizabeth Barfoot Christian, Rock Brands: Selling Sound in a Media Saturated Culture ,
# A car in poor condition.
#* 2005 August 6, Warm affection for a rust-bucket past , [http://www.smh.com.au/news/words/warm-affection-for-a-rustbucket-past/2005/08/04/1123125839592.html]
#* 2010 , Rebecca James, Beautiful Malice ,
#* 2011 , Amarinda Jones, Seducing Celestine ,
A large amount of money, a fortune.
* 2009 , Matthew Vierling, The Blizzard ,
* 2010 , Liz Young, Fair Game ,
* 2011 , Michael R. Häack, Passport: A Novel of International Intrigue ,
* 2011 , Bibe, A Victim ,
(label) Something highly effective or attractive.
# A success; the bomb.
# A very attractive woman; a bombshell.
# An action or statement that causes a strong reaction.
# A long forward pass.
# (label) A jump into water in a squatting position, with the arms wrapped around the legs, for maximum splashing.
(label) A heavy-walled container designed to permit chemical reactions under high pressure.
* 2008 , François Cardarelli, Materials Handbook: A Concise Desktop Reference ,
(label) A great booming noise; a hollow sound.
* (Francis Bacon) (1561-1626)
(intransitive) To attack using one or more s; to bombard.
* 2000 , Canadian Peace Research Institute, Canadian Peace Research and Education Association, Peace Research , Volumes 32-33,
* 2005 , Howard Zinn, A People's History of the United States: 1492-Present ,
* 2007 , David Parker, Hertfordshire Children in War and Peace, 1914-1939 ,
(slang) To fail dismally.
* 1992 June, Lynn Norment, Arsenio Hall: Claiming the Late-night Crown'', in '' ,
* 2000 , Carmen Infantino, Jon B. Cooke (interviewer), The Carmen Infantino Interview'', in Jon B. Cooke, Neal Adams, ''Comic Book Artist Collection ,
* 2008 , Erik Sternberger, The Long and Winding Road ,
(informal) To jump into water in a squatting position, with the arms wrapped around the legs.
(obsolete) To sound; to boom; to make a humming or buzzing sound.
(slang) To cover an area in many graffiti tags.
* 2009 , Scape Martinez, GRAFF: The Art & Technique of Graffiti (page 124)
(informal, AU) to add an excessive amount of chlorine to a pool when it has not been maintained properly.
(slang) Great, awesome.
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As adjectives the difference between print and bomb
is that print is of, relating to, or writing for printed publications while bomb is great, awesome.As verbs the difference between print and bomb
is that print is to produce one or more copies of a text or image on a surface, especially by machine; often used with out or off: print out, print off while bomb is to attack using one or more bombs; to bombard.As nouns the difference between print and bomb
is that print is books and other material created by printing presses, considered collectively or as a medium while bomb is an explosive device used or intended as a weapon.English
Adjective
(-)Verb
(en verb)- Print the draft double-spaced so we can mark changes between the lines.
- The circuitry is printed onto the semiconductor surface.
- Print your name here and sign below.
- I'm only in grade 2, so I only know how to print .
- How could they print an unfounded rumour like that?
- From the moment he prints , he must expect to hear no more truth.
- to print calico
- A look will print a thought that never may remove.
- Upon his breastplate he beholds a dint, / Which in that field young Edward's sword did print .
- some footsteps printed in the clay
- Forth on his fiery steed betimes he rode, / That scarcely prints the turf on which he trod.
Derived terms
* printer * printing form * printing pressNoun
(en noun)- Three citations are required for each meaning, including one in print .
- TV and the internet haven't killed print .
- Write in print using block letters.
- The print is too small for me to read.
- Using a crayon, the girl made a print of the leaf under the page.
- Did the police find any prints at the scene?
Antonyms
* (writing without connected letters) cursiveDerived terms
* fine print * fingerprint * footprint * in print * newsprint * out of print * pawprint * printmaking * printout * small print * thumbprintExternal links
* (Print) ----bomb
English
(wikipedia bomb)Noun
(en noun)page 629,
- The size of the ground hole crater from the blast indicates it was a bomb .
Martin Lukacs
Canada becoming launch-pad of a global tar sands and oil shale frenzy, passage=If Alberta’s reserves are a carbon bomb , this global expansion of tar sands and oil shale exploitation amounts to an escalating emissions arms race, the unlocking of a subterranean cache of weapons of mass ecological destruction.}}
page 277,
- Projection problems plagued Countess? London premiere on January 5, 1967, Jerry Epstein recalled, and it was perhaps an omen, for reaction by critics afterward was swift and immediate: The film was a bomb .
unnumbered page,
- The movie was a bomb and so was my next film, Balboa , in which I played a scheming real estate tycoon.
page 11,
- The movie was a bomb , but it put the band before an even larger audience.
- Nowadays, an old bomb simply won’t pass the inspection.
page 19,
- We?ve got the money and it just feels ridiculous to let you drive around in that old bomb .
page 49,
- After two weeks of driving it she knew the car was a bomb and she did not need anyone saying it to her. The only one allowed to pick on her car was her. Piece of crap car
page 133,
- When Kiley presented Blackpool with the custom shotgun, he said, “This must?ve cost a bomb .”
page 136,
- ‘You?ve already spent a bomb !’
- ‘Not on'' it, Sal — ''under it. Presents!’ As we eventually staggered up to bed, Sally said to me, ‘I hope to God he?s not been spending a bomb on presents, too.’
page 47,
- The kids cost a bomb to feed, they eat all the time.
page 38,
- He had recently exchanged his old bike for a new, three speed racer, which cost a bomb and the weekly payment were becoming difficult, with the dangers of repossession.
page 276,
- The process consisted in preparing the metal by metallothermic reduction of titanium tetrachloride with sodium metal in a steel bomb .
- A pillar of irona great bomb in the chamber beneath.
Usage notes
* The diametrical slang meanings are somewhat distinguishable by the article. For “a success”, the phrase is generally the bomb''. Otherwise ''bomb can mean “a failure”.Synonyms
* (attractive woman) bombshell * (car) rustbucket * (large amount of money) fortune, packet, pretty pennyDerived terms
* A-bomb * atom bomb * atomic bomb * barrel bomb * bomb squad * car bomb * dirty bomb * E-bomb * F-bomb * gay bomb * H-bomb * hydrogen bomb * neutron bomb * paper bomb * petrol bomb * pipe bomb * sex bombSee also
* lemonVerb
(en verb)page 65,
- 15 May: US jets bombed' air-defence sites north of Mosul, as the Russian Foreign Ministry accused the US and Britain of intentionally ' bombing civilian targets. (AP)
page 421,
- Italy had bombed' cities in the Ethiopian war; Italy and Germany had ' bombed civilians in the Spanish Civil War; at the start of World War II German planes dropped bombs on Rotterdam in Holland, Coventry in England, and elsewhere.
page 59,
- Essendon was bombed in the early hours of 3 September 1916; a few houses and part of the church were destroyed, and two sisters killed.
page 74,
- So Hall quit the job, turned in the company car and went to Chicago, where as a stand-up comic he bombed' several times before he was discovered by Nancy Wilson, who took him on the road — where he ' bombed again before a room of Republicans—and then to Los Angeles.
page 12,
- Carmen: Then it bombed' and it ' bombed badly. After a few more issues I asked Mike what was happening and he said, “I?m trying everything I can but it?s just not working.” So I took him off the book and he left. That was it.
page 62,
- She was the reason why he bombed the interview. He just couldn?t seem to get her out of his mind.
- (Ben Jonson)
- It is often used to collect other writer's tags, and future plans for bombing and piecing.
Derived terms
* bomber * bomb outAdjective
(en adjective)- Have you tried the new tacos from that restaurant? They're pretty bomb !