Associations to the word «Imprinting»
Noun
- Umbrella
- Breast
- Mixture
- Nu
- Prometheus
- Goodness
- Dwelling
- Cancellation
- Capitol
- Syndrome
- Mushroom
- Mammal
- Solid
- Mark
- Dorchester
- Repeat
- Cassette
- Calif
- Series
- Trademark
- Material
- Charlton
- Ltd
- Virgin
- Silhouette
- Mechanics
- Signature
- Almanac
- Lil
- Memoir
- Corsair
- Consciousness
- Cluster
- Levine
- Potts
- Caliber
- Human
- Cassie
- Mercury
- Brill
- Uk
- Faber
- Veil
- Understanding
- Alternate
- Receptor
- Notion
- Issue
- Atrium
- Waist
- Bear
- Genre
- Flagship
- Throughput
- Reproduction
- Voyager
- Tissue
- Ajax
- Files
- Mini
- Ca
- Batch
- Lp
- Superman
- Verity
- Farewell
- Bray
- Passport
- Face
Adjective
Wiktionary
IMPRINT, noun. An impression; the mark left behind by printing something.
IMPRINT, noun. The name and details of a publisher or printer, as printed in a book etc.; a publishing house.
IMPRINT, noun. A distinctive marking, symbol or logo.
IMPRINT, verb. To leave a print, impression, image, etc.
IMPRINT, verb. To learn something indelibly at a particular stage of life, such as who one's parents are.
IMPRINT, verb. To mark a gene as being from a particular parent so that only one of the two copies of the gene is expressed.
Dictionary definition
IMPRINT, noun. A distinctive influence; "English stills bears the imprint of the Norman invasion".
IMPRINT, noun. A concavity in a surface produced by pressing; "he left the impression of his fingers in the soft mud".
IMPRINT, noun. An identification of a publisher; a publisher's name along with the date and address and edition that is printed at the bottom of the title page; "the book was published under a distinguished imprint".
IMPRINT, noun. An impression produced by pressure or printing.
IMPRINT, noun. A device produced by pressure on a surface.
IMPRINT, verb. Establish or impress firmly in the mind; "We imprint our ideas onto our children".
IMPRINT, verb. Mark or stamp with or as if with pressure; "To make a batik, you impress a design with wax".
Wise words
A word is not a crystal, transparent and unchanged; it is
the skin of a living thought and may vary greatly in color
and content according to the circumstances and time in which
it is used.