Imprint in a sentence as a noun

Screening won't help, but a credit card imprint sure goes a long way.

This is a good one, and getting signals through sound, visual and text will leave a better imprint in our brains.

The first price we see for something tends to imprint strongly and we view all subsequent prices in those terms.

They will often imprint your card onto their copy of the check-in document.

The water then has an "imprint" or "spirit" of the original substance which will cure the cold

In any case, you need to ask yourself why it feels good to make an imprint on another human being's mind and soul.

Many credit card companies are starting to issue new cards which are completely flat, making it impossible to make imprint.

Imprint in a sentence as a verb

To protect themselves against chargebacks the merchant needs to keep a copy of the signed credit card slip, not a physical imprint of the card.

Still\n from the perspective of thirty or thirty five years, I can state\n that their imprint upon the mathematics of our time has not been\n very profound.

For instance, "Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass" has a puzzle where you have an emblem on one screen, and you close the lid to imprint the emblem on a map on the other screen.

I don't think it's about sex, the answer is a lot less Freudian and a lot more obvious: it's about the joy of being able to make an imprint on another human being's mind & soul.

On microcontrollers it's because you really have limited memory, and on larger machines it's because your code cache imprint matters for performance.

I'd argue that shopping a believable picture of a credit card that stands up to scrutiny is a higher barrier than the imprint - which really just involves some movable letters and carbon paper...

Imprint definitions

noun

a distinctive influence; "English stills bears the imprint of the Norman invasion"

noun

a concavity in a surface produced by pressing; "he left the impression of his fingers in the soft mud"

See also: depression impression

noun

an identification of a publisher; a publisher's name along with the date and address and edition that is printed at the bottom of the title page; "the book was published under a distinguished imprint"

noun

an impression produced by pressure or printing

See also: embossment

noun

a device produced by pressure on a surface

verb

establish or impress firmly in the mind; "We imprint our ideas onto our children"

See also: form

verb

mark or stamp with or as if with pressure; "To make a batik, you impress a design with wax"

See also: impress