1. reprint - Noun
2. reprint - Verb
To print again; to print a second or a new edition of.
To renew the impression of.
A second or a new impression or edition of any printed work; specifically, the publication in one country of a work previously published in another.
Source: Webster's dictionaryI don't copy recipes without trying them out. I don't reprint without trying them again. Elizabeth David
The deal is that you can do it, you don't really owe me anything, but at the end of it, I own the film. Then I can actually go out and reprint or not reprint if it I want. Todd McFarlane
The name of this volume which combines the reprint with an introduction has been suggested by Arun Shourie, as in the case of Hindu Temples: What Happened to them. Sita Ram Goel
Others, amounting to four novels and a mess of short stories which I did not think worth preserving, I have done my best to eliminate from the record by refusing all requests for permission to reprint them, and I hope I have done a good job of making them hard to unearth. Leslie Charteris
They never reprinted the famous treatise Source: Internet
According to the Federal Bureau of Investigation : error In 1995, the Camorra cooperated with the Russian mafia in a scheme in which the Camorra would bleach out US $1.00 bills and reprint them as $100s. Source: Internet