How to Use into print in a Sentence
into print
idiom-
In terms of not making it into print, the stakes for soup are high.
— Yotam Ottolenghi, New York Times, 11 Oct. 2023 -
The pic, to Osbourne’s knowledge, never made it into print.
— Kory Grow, Rolling Stone, 14 Sep. 2022 -
Still more unusual was the way the article had found its way into print.
— Adam Kirsch, WSJ, 15 June 2023 -
Are there rowdier stories that didn’t make it into print?
— David Marchesephoto Illustration By Bráulio Amado, New York Times, 20 May 2021 -
That commercial pulse quickened: Over the next few years Norton brought each of Fox’s other adult novels back into print.
— New York Times, 13 July 2022 -
Some details are too horrific to make it into print and are left in reporters’ notes or carefully edited out of videos.
— Christine Fernando, USA TODAY, 14 July 2022 -
The reference is deliberate, at the very least on the part of the translator: one of the two books Morselli managed to get into print during his lifetime was a study of Proust.
— Andrew Martin, Harper's Magazine, 24 Nov. 2020 -
The notion of Amazon facing antitrust concerns in those late Obama years never came up—or at least didn’t find their way into print.
— Aaron Pressman, Fortune, 13 Oct. 2020 -
Weinstein’s abuse was such an open secret that Seth McFarlane joked about it at the Oscars years before any of the stories were put into print.
— Diane Brady, Forbes, 20 Dec. 2022 -
The volume put Faulkner’s earlier novels back into print, and helped readers make sense of his modernist texts.
— Casey Cep, The New Yorker, 23 Nov. 2020 -
The deal, which still must pass the Legislature, was put into print on Monday morning, meaning lawmakers could vote on the bill as soon as Thursday.
— Alexei Koseff, SFChronicle.com, 25 Jan. 2021 -
In recent years Lapine has worked closely with the Zelazny estate to bring many of Zelazny’s older titles back into print.
— Geek's Guide To The Galaxy, WIRED, 13 Jan. 2023 -
That lack of an extra layer of scrutiny sometimes gives way to errors finding their way into print.
— Oliver Darcy, CNN, 19 Sep. 2023 -
Like many principals, the stories about Ray that years later found their way into print involve discipline.
— Joy Wallace Dickinson, orlandosentinel.com, 21 Mar. 2021 -
But somehow, one position was deleted during the diagram’s trip from Fassel’s hands and into print.
— Kent Somers, The Arizona Republic, 20 July 2022 -
Their sixth and biggest album comes back into print with a color pressing, also unspecified.
— Chris Willman, Variety, 2 Oct. 2023 -
The anniversary and those experiences were melded into print.
— From Usa Today Network and Wire Reports, USA TODAY, 22 Dec. 2020 -
Tibbetts even appends a history of the Ignatius Press, which brought nearly all of Chesterton’s voluminous writing back into print.
— Washington Post, 15 Dec. 2021 -
Both used sidesplitting humor as a Trojan horse to smuggle complicated and important ideas into print.
— Corey Seymour, Rolling Stone, 16 Feb. 2022 -
No two copies are alike, thanks largely to typographical errors that got fixed as the press run continued but still made it into print because the paper was expensive and flawed pages weren’t discarded.
— Roy Rivenburg, The Christian Science Monitor, 8 Nov. 2023 -
But getting the story into print, a new book alleges, was as complicated as the investigation itself.
— Los Angeles Times, 12 July 2022 -
Only fools put far-reaching predictions into print where they can be immortalized and then resurrected to prove the foolishness of the predictor.
— John Warner, Chicago Tribune, 17 June 2023 -
Only fools put far-reaching predictions into print where they can be immortalized and then resurrected to prove the foolishness of the predictor.
— John Warner, Chicago Tribune, 17 June 2023 -
After her death, Dunn’s son, along with numerous friends and fans, including editor Naomi Huffman, pushed to bring Dunn’s unpublished fiction into print.
— Elizabeth Hand, Washington Post, 11 Nov. 2022 -
There are innumerable other stories, true or false, of abominable third-degree cruelties which have not found their way into print but are widely circulated.
— Andrew Cockburn, Harper's Magazine, 18 Aug. 2020 -
Twice already it was sent me to do the impossible, the unpredictable, in my country: ushering a tale of the camps into print under Communist censorship, and publishing Archipelago while in the Dragon’s maw.
— Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, National Review, 18 Nov. 2020 -
The Enquirer obituary added that many printing houses around the country used samples of his handwriting as a test of skill for young compositors, or people in printing houses who put handwriting into print.
— Cole Behrens, Cincinnati.com, 13 June 2020 -
After all, Kardashian has been delving into print more combinations.
— Liana Satenstein, Vogue, 19 Apr. 2022 -
Minnesota’s devotion to Bunyan — which includes claims to his birthplace being in Bemidji, multiple statues and even a scenic byway — could be related to when Bunyan stories made their way into print and popular culture.
— Chelsey Lewis, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 8 Feb. 2022 -
Rogen explained what happened, sort of, without clarifying anything about Watson’s alleged behavior — or at least without any clarification that made it into print.
— Los Angeles Times, 30 Mar. 2021
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'into print.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
Last Updated: