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  2. Jun 20, 2022 · facsimile (n.)"exact copy," 1690s, two words, from Latin fac simile "make similar," from fac imperative of facere "to make" (from PIE root *dhe-"to set, put") + simile, neuter of similis "like, resembling, of the same kind" (see similar). One-word form predominated in 20c. As an adjective from 1877.

    • 한국어 (Korean)

      facsimile 뜻: 복사; "정확한 사본," 1690년대, 두 단어로 이루어진 것은 라틴어 'fac...

    • Italiano (Italian)

      Significato di facsimile: facsimile; "copia esatta," 1690s,...

    • Factional

      c. 1500, from French faction (14c.) and directly from Latin...

    • Facilitator

      1530s, "action, a thing performed, anything done, a deed,"...

    • Fax

      fax. (n.). 1948, in reference to the technology, short for...

    • Fact-Finding

      Old English findan "come upon, meet with; discover; obtain...

  3. The earliest known use of the noun facsimile is in the mid 1600s. OED's earliest evidence for facsimile is from before 1661, in the writing of Thomas Fuller, Church of England clergyman.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › FacsimileFacsimile - Wikipedia

    A facsimile (from Latin fac simile, "to make alike") is a copy or reproduction of an old book, manuscript, map, art print, or other item of historical value that is as true to the original source as possible.

  5. What is a Facsimile? The word derives from the Latin term: fac simile = make it similar. A facsimile is the faithful reproduction (an exact copy) of a manuscript, or printed book.

  6. Historically, facsimile dates from Alexander Bain’s British patent in 1843. In the first half of the 20th century, John V.L. Hogan and many other United States inventors furthered its development, and in the early 1950s there was the first substantial exploration of modern digital, or time-compression, facsimile using run-length encoding.

  7. The first facsimile in the history of the book was a manuscript of Austrian provenancethe Goldene Bulle—reproduced in 1697 by the Frankfurt law historian Heinrich Günther Thülemeyer and Johann Friedrich Fleischer; based on King Wenceslaus' deluxe presentation manuscript, this copper plate reproduction reflects the means and possibilites ...

  8. At all events, the thing was not a facsimile, but an imitation, as Figgins honestly called it. The Byfields, John and Mary, seem to have had a certain reputation as copyists of old woodcuts. Their work is found in some of Dibdin's books and in Holbein's Dance of Death, 18335 re-issued 1878. "Fac-similes," wrote

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