Facsímil in english
Facsimile
pronunciation: fæksɪməli part of speech: noun
pronunciation: fæksɪməli part of speech: noun
In gestures
facsímil = facsimile.
Example: Improvements in document delivery services (DDS) via the further application of techniques such as facsimile transmission will also have an important role to play.more:
» edición facsímil = facsimile reproduction [Reproducción exacta, por cualquier procedimiento, del texto e ilustraciones de un determinado ejemplar impreso o manuscrito] .
Example: A facsimile reproduction is a reproduction that has as its chief purpose to simulate the physical appearance of the original work as well as to provide an exact replica of the text.» editor de facsímiles = facsimilist .
Example: Even though the facsimilist's paper is of the same period as that of the rest of the book, he is most unlikely to be able to match it precisely in all its characteristics thickness, texture, colour, chain-lines, watermark, and the propinquity of worm-holes and stains.» facsímil de línea = line-block facsimile .
Example: Photo-etched blocks, which became available in the 1870s, give the colour and impression of letterpress printing but they lose definition in the process of reproduction, so that line-block facsimiles combine rough edges with an improbably even colour.» facsímil fotolitografiado = photolitho facsimile .
Example: The early photolitho books of 1856-7 were again collections of reproductions of art photographs, but in 1858 there was an event of greater bibliographical significance: the production of a photolitho facsimile of a printed book.» reproducción casi facsímil = quasi-facsimile [Transcripción detallada y fiel de los datos bibliográficos (letras y símbolos) de un documento aunque no incluye el tipo de letra o la distribucion de los datos en el papel] .
Example: The quasi-facsimile method is also used for transcribing imprints colophons, running titles, and indeed any other printed matter.» transmisión de facsímiles = facsimile transmission .
Example: The new technologies for information storage and retrieval which have burst upon the scene in only the past few years are mind boggling: electronic mail, synchronous and asynchronous communications networks, computer imaging, desktop publishing, facsimile transmission, just to name a few.