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Definition of Press run
1. Noun. The period that presses run to produce an issue of a newspaper.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Press Run
Literary usage of Press run
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Production, Distribution and Readership of a Conservative Journal of the by Harvey Chisick (1992)
"The press run for this work in 1778 was 1250, while the number of ... The size
of the press run need not, of course, be the same as the number of ..."
2. The Production, Distribution and Readership of a Conservative Journal of the by Harvey Chisick (1992)
"The press run for this work in 1778 was 1250, while the number of ... The size
of the press run need not, of course, be the same as the number of ..."
3. Russia, Ukraine, and the Breakup of the Soviet Union by Roman Szporluk (2000)
"... calculated as a percentage of the total pre-issue press run, has changed in
the following way: 1950 1960 1970 Ukrainian papers as percent of total press ..."
4. Auditing: Theory and Practice by Robert Hiester Montgomery (1916)
"The auditor must, of course, take steps to assure himself that the press-run book
which is submitted to him has not been "faked" for his especial benefit. ..."
5. Scientific Circulation Management for Newspapers by William Rufus Scott (1915)
"Eliminating Deadheads If circulation managers scientifically studied how to keep
the press run at a minimum, they would make surprising economies in paper ..."