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cold type

American  

noun

Printing.
  1. type set by a method other than the casting of molten metal, as text composed on a typewriter and photographed.


Etymology

Origin of cold type

First recorded in 1945–50

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The skills required to turn hot lead into letters on a Linotype machine or to position a strip of cold type on a grid board were easily transferrable.

From Washington Post • Oct. 18, 2022

They were doing this in preparation for what turned out to be the glacially-paced change from hot to cold type, tumbling into the … gulp … digital age.

From Washington Times • Mar. 4, 2019

His career spanned an era of change in the technology of producing a daily newspaper, the evolution of hot type to cold type and the use of computers to produce a printed paper.

From Washington Post • Jun. 2, 2015

The paper is the first sizable venture in daily publishing by a "cold type" photo-offset process instead of conventional letterpress printing.

From Time Magazine Archive

The speeches of even Gladstone, when reported word for word, read but indifferently when seen in cold type, and no speech of Wilmot's was ever properly reported.

From Wilmot and Tilley by Hannay, James