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17:43 Nov 4, 2013 |
Japanese to English translations [PRO] Tech/Engineering - Printing & Publishing | |||||||
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| Selected response from: bornintheusa (X) United States Local time: 06:47 | ||||||
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Summary of answers provided | ||||
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4 | Step and Repeat (Imposition) |
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4 | The number of sheets |
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2 | multiple-up printing |
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multiple-up printing Explanation: I could not find a direct translation that seems to meet the specific description here, but the following links is a Japanese explanation of what "付け合わせ" is in the Japanese printing business: http://www.e-chirashi.biz/words/tukeawase.php http://www.karafuneya.com/blog/2009/04/post-65.html After reading through these, I found the following English sites which seem to relate to what was being described in the Japanese sites: http://www4.infoprintsolutionscompany.com/help/index.jsp?top... http://www4.infoprintsolutionscompany.com/help/index.jsp?top... That said, I could garner the terminology "multiple-up printing" which is a description of a technique where multiple prints can be made to a single sheet of paper for cutting and binding later. As for the numbers underneath, I couldn't exactly find a reference to those, but it seems to denote the number of pages that can be cut from the sheet, so in the case of "3x5" it sounds like "3-by-5, for a total of 15 cuts". If the "size" section shows a smaller area dependent on the multiplier here, then it probably means what I have here (then again, I'm just guessing this one). Example sentence(s):
Reference: http://formaxprinting.com/blog/2010/05/07/printing-lingo-wha... Reference: http://www.karafuneya.com/blog/2009/04/post-65.html |
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Step and Repeat (Imposition) Explanation: 付け合わせ is a impositioning work to lay out multiple pages, whether single page or different pages, onto one larger printing sheet. Please see the website below. Reference: http://sintraworks.com/commandpdfuserguide/lessons/Essential... |
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The number of sheets Explanation: I think below is the English version of the explanation you received. Copied from the link below. "Calculate the number of sheets (i.e. 8 1/2x11, 12x18, etc.) you can cut out of a parent size sheet." Reference: http://okpaper.com/calculators/paper-cuts |
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