GLOSSARY ENTRY (DERIVED FROM QUESTION BELOW) | ||||||
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19:26 Mar 14, 2014 |
English language (monolingual) [PRO] Medical - Computers: Software / Pegasus | |||||||
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| Selected response from: John Alphonse (X) United States | ||||||
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SUMMARY OF ALL EXPLANATIONS PROVIDED | ||||
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4 | an instance of printing an illustration or design so as to leave no margin after the page has been trimmed. |
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3 +1 | EVENT ID: BLEED // PAGE#: 5 |
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4 | full-page printed, borderless |
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3 | loss of blood |
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Summary of reference entries provided | |||
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bleed loss of blood Explanation: It would be 'bleeding' in plain English but perhaps 'bleed' is used in medicine. Given that this is a medical report, 'bleed' and 'page' don't go together as suggested in the reference comment. -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 4 hrs (2014-03-15 00:02:08 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- The event would be 'bleeding'; 'bleed' is perhaps fine as an 'Event ID'. -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 4 hrs (2014-03-15 00:13:57 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- In computer software it is common to use small integers or short character strings as IDs. These don't necessarily mean something (a description of the event is stored somewhere) but it helps if the ID suggests the description. I suspect 'bleed' suggests bleeding or loss of blood. |
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bleed an instance of printing an illustration or design so as to leave no margin after the page has been trimmed. Explanation: This appears to be the meaning og bleed here. -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 6 hrs (2014-03-15 02:04:30 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- of, not og |
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bleed EVENT ID: BLEED // PAGE#: 5 Explanation: I first observed that "EVENT ID" is English, so even if the report is in FR I'm happy to start with the hypothesis that this line is EN. Next observation: the previous line bears two references; what if it was the same here? And all of a sudden it became clear to me that this was very probably saying that the type of event was a bleed, and this is page 5. If I'm right, this is obviously not one you're going to be adding to the KudoZ glossary! |
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bleed full-page printed, borderless Explanation: Generally the bleed pages for a magazine, report, trade show program, etc., are the first and last several pages (same sheets of paper through the press/layout etc.) printed fully to the paper's edge, no border, thus called "bleed" pages. They're normally reserved for advertising but not always - and generally used with graphics to improve graphic presentation. |
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3 hrs |
Reference Reference information: http://www.proz.com/kudoz/spanish_to_english/advertising_pub... Spanish term or phrase: página al corte English translation: bleed page bleed page definitionbleed page - definition of bleed page from BusinessDictionary.com: Printing industry term for a page on which the printed (inked) area does not have the ... www.businessdictionary.com/definition/bleed-page.html - 16k - Cached - Similar pages bleed page Definition Printing industry term for a page on which the printed (inked) area does not have the usual blank (inkless) margins. In all printing processes, a narrow space must be left along the paper's edges for it to be gripped, and to prevent printing ink/toner from going on the ink-free/toner-free parts of the machine. Bleed printing is more expensive where it requires oversized printing plates and/or paper (from which inkless margins are trimmed off to leave only the inked part). Read more: http://www.businessdictionary.com/definition/bleed-page.html... |
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