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An issue by the publisher, which may contain various states, usually to the priority of copies within the first edition.
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Copies of a publication with a specific date on the cover (eg the January 2002 issue)
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Copies of a book made up from sheets of a given printing but with the addition of (for instance) a new title-page. jansenist binding A binding with an austere exterior, sometimes with elaborate doublures.
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The part of a journal that is published at one time. Journals may publish issues on a monthly, quarterly, or other basis. See also volume.
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A particular publication, complete in itself, of a serial or periodical which is issued at intervals or in parts.
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all copies of a particular publication that are published on the same date.
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A single copy of a periodical. Journal A scholarly or professional periodical. Keyword A term descriptive of a topic or idea, but which is not necessarily a descriptor (cf) or subject heading (cf), that is, a word that is used more generally or loosely.
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one of a series published periodically; "she found an old issue of the magazine in her dentist's waitingroom"
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prepare and issue for public distribution or sale; "publish a magazine or newspaper"
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an indication of this, but pretty soon lawyers are going to realise that you are publishing on a global basis, with all the legal implications that that entails
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a priority in our relations with Laos
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All the copies of a specific periodical published on the same date. A subscription entitles the subscriber to receive one copy of each issue. In libraries, all the issues of a periodical published during the same calendar year are usually bound together in a single annual volume.
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Formed when journal or magazine articles are combined for publication.
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Similar to edition.
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A uniquely dated and numbered part of a periodical.
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The part of a specific serial published on a particular date. Could also be called the 'number'. Several issues normally make up a volume. Individual issues are usually soft-covered and unbound; when all the issues of a particular volume have been published, they may be hard-bound together.
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A single unit of a journal. Journals are published one issue at a time. A set number of issues will comprise a volume.
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A single, discrete unit of a periodical title formed when several articles are combined for publication. Usually uniquely numbered or dated. Example: Newsweek, July 14, 1997 represents a particular issue of the magazine Newsweek.
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A unit in a volume. For example: 26(5) = volume 26, issue 5. E-F H-I K-L M-O T-Z
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A change, textual or otherwise, made after the book has been published. (e.g.: The first issue of Mark Twain's A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court has an "s"-like ornament between "The" and "King" on page 59. In the case of many of C. S. Forester's books, sheets were printed but not bound at the same time; when they were, sometimes years later, they were bound in differently colored bindings. The color of the binding then became an issue point.)
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a specific publication, complete in itself, of a serial or periodical. Usually indicated in a citation as "n" (number) or "i" (issue) and an issue number.
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occurs when a portion of an edition is intentionally published differently from the rest of the edition. For example, there are two issues of a book if sets of sheets are bound by two different publishers, each using a different binding cloth. see also State
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A division of a periodical publication such as a journal, serial, magazine or newspaper, published and numbered sequentially. Periodical issues are usually published at regular time intervals and consolidated into annual volumes.
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a part, usually numbered, of a journal volume, (e.g., Veterinary Surgery, v.32, Issue 1, Jan/Feb. 2003)
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copies from even a single impression of a book may sometimes end up on the market in somewhat altered form - with, for example, a particular passage excised: this gives rise to what are known as separate publisher's issues within the impression.
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All the copies of an edition sold at any one time. Each issue will normally have its own title-page. Successive issues of the same edition may have other minor textual differences.
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Every single part of a periodical or serial publication bearing its own number and date.
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A unique document that is part of a serial that could be identified by words, numbers, or date of publication.
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All the copies of a periodical with the same cover date and distributed at the same time.
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The priority of copies within the first edition. aid In: May be a letter or other sheets inserted loosely into a book.
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A single numbered or dated issue of a series, a periodical or a serial publication. They are usually so thin that two or more may be bound together to form a volume that can then be stored in the stacks.
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All copies of a magazine of the date given on the cover. This is not necessarily the on-sale date (see definition).
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journals are published in volumes - volumes are published in parts called issues. For example, FAZE magazine publishes 4 issues per year.
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Painos Upplaga See Edition
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Synonymous with State, referring to the priority of copies within the first edition.
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The number assigned by the publisher to a separately issued part of one particular volume of a journal. See also volume. In the following example, the article appeared on pages 116-123 in issue 3 of volume 9 of the journal Research Strategies, published in the summer of 1991: Example: O’Hanlon, Nancy. “Begin at the End: A Model for Research Skills Instruction.” Research Strategies 9:3 (Summer 1991), pp. 116-123.
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When a printing of an edition is altered by the printer or publisher during manufacture you will have variant issue.
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