2022-02-17
ศัพท์ น่าสับสน - Set – E - edition & impression & printing
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Dictionary.com:
ออกเสียง edition = “ih-DISH-uhn”
ออกเสียง impression = “im-PRESH-uhn”
ออกเสียง printing = “PRIN-ting”
Dictionary of Problem Words and Expressions:
edition & impression & printing
These terms are frequently used interchangeably,
but they have distinct meanings.
Edition, from a Latin word meaning “to give out,”
refers to
(1) the format (size and shape) in which a work is published;
(2) the entire numberof copies (impressions) of a published work
(book, magazine, newspaper)
printed froma set of type in one continuous run;
(3) a version of any work, printed or not, that is publicly presented,
as for instance, the latest edition of a play or opera.
If a new printing involves no changes in the text or illustrations of a work,
or only minor corrections,
the result is not a newedition but a new impression.
A thorough revision
resulting in a noticeably different version is a new edition.
A first edition is a work as it is or was originally published.
Animpression is one of a number of printings
of the same editionmade at different times from the same set of type.
Merriam-Webster Dictionary
Usage Notes
A Commonly Confused Word
addition vs. edition
Addition and edition are both nouns.
Addition refers to something added,
as in
"new additions to the museum's collection" and
"an addition to the house,"
as well as to the process ofadding,
as in "the addition of cream to the soup" and
"math problems involving addition and subtraction."
It's also the word used in phrases with in:
"cookies in addition to the pie and cake."
Edition refers to a particular version of a book, product, newspaper, etc., as in "an illustrated edition,"
or to something presented as one of a series,
as in "tonight's edition of the show."
Merriam-Webster Dictionary:
Choose the Right Synonym for impression
Idea, Concept, Conception, Thought, Notion, Impression
mean what exists in the mind as a representation
(as of something comprehended)
or as a formulation (as of a plan).
Idea may apply to a mental image or formulation of something seen or known or imagined, to a pure abstraction, or to something assumed or vaguely sensed.
innovative ideas
my idea of paradise
Concept may apply to the idea formed by consideration of instances of a species or genus or, more broadly, to any idea of what a thing ought to be.
a society with no concept of private property
Conception is often interchangeable with CONCEPT;
it may stress the process of imagining or formulatingrather than the result.
our changing conception of what constitutes art
Thought is likely to suggest the result of reflecting, reasoning, or meditating rather than of imagining.
commit your thoughts to paper
Notion suggests an idea not much resolved by analysis or reflection and may suggest the capricious or accidental.
you have the oddest notions
Impression applies to an idea or notion resulting immediately from some stimulation of the senses.
the first impression is of soaring height