Print
in sentence
690 examples of Print in a sentence
What's even more amazing is it will
print
out a postage label on the spot, because it knows the way of the item.
Well, if you
print
it out, it looks like a thousand pounds of material that you're carrying around all the time.
And if you were able to
print
out everybody in your cell phone, the room would be very crowded.
So on the top-level you have your overall results, the things that might jump out at you from the fine
print.
And you can actually see here the printhead going through and printing this structure, and it takes about 40 minutes to
print
this structure.
This particular printer we're designing now is actually one where we
print
right on the patient.
It takes about seven hours to
print
a kidney, so this is about three hours into it now.
So you can
print
out whatever you want, you can
print
out a tower bridge, you can
print
out Agathe's husband ... (Laughter) OK, but, what makes it so mind-blowing?
When you have a microprinter in your store, you can go to the store, they scan your ear, they just press "Print," the 3-D model gets sliced, and you can go for a coffee, you can go to the university, whatever you want, and instead of five days, you can have your ear shell or your hearing aid in just one day.
But today, in 2011, if you go and buy a color laser printer from any major laser printer manufacturer and
print
a page, that page will end up having slight yellow dots printed on every single page, in a pattern which makes the page unique to you and to your printer.
The store owned one of those machines that can
print
on plates of sugar.
And kids could bring in drawings and have the store
print
a sugar plate for the top of their birthday cake.
But it turns out to be illegal to
print
a child's drawing of Micky Mouse onto a plate of sugar.
This is like having a license to
print
money and a barrel of free ink.
And they use robotic arms to
print
everything from solid stone to concrete, to wax.
Sorel cement was originally invented in 1867, and it's the beautiful chemical marriage of magnesium oxide and local sand, which they can now use to
print
solid stone walls.
And in France, they have a regulator-approved although still experimental process where they
print
two parallel tracks of foam insulation and pour concrete in the middle to create solid stone.
And not to be outdone, in Australia, we've pioneered an amazing technology that allows you to
print
wax molds and pour concrete over the top of them, allowing you to create really intricately beautiful and cost-effective facades that you can see in person the next time you travel the London Underground.
You can see, in the fine
print
at the top: "Police shooting deaths" means not just people shot by police, but people who have shot themselves in the presence of police.
While the real "New York Times" has this slogan of, "All the News that's Fit to Print," we offered a more forward-thinking message of, "All the News We Hope to Print." (Laughter) And that's because our paper is postdated six months into the future, so when people are handed these on the street, they were literally getting an artifact from the utopian future, sort of a blueprint for an attainably utopian future brought about by this very important idea of popular pressure.
Here, we actually infuse a lot of the individual's taste and personality into it, everywhere we can, and we three-dimensionally
print
the results.
So why not just
print
the entire leg?
I'm going to
print
them and send them back to you.
And even more amusingly, and on my debit card too, we
print
the name and the SALT code and everything else on the front too.
You already saw the work by Tony Atala on TED, but this ability to start filling things like inkjet cartridges with cells are allowing us to
print
skin, organs and a whole series of other body parts.
They report at just 37 percent of stories in print, TV and radio.
Even in stories on gender-based violence, men get an overwhelming majority of
print
space and airtime.
Technology then meant we had to hire a viewing cinema, find and pay for the
print
and the projectionist.
So, last month, the Encyclopaedia Britannica announced that it is going out of
print
after 244 years, which made me nostalgic, because I remember playing a game with the colossal encyclopedia set in my hometown library back when I was a kid, maybe 12 years old.
Actually, I argue that there is another revolution going on, and it's the one that has to do with open-source hardware and the maker's movement, because the printer that my friend used to
print
the toy is actually open-source.
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