英:[ˈkækstən]
美:[ˈkækstən]
英:[ˈkækstən]
美:[ˈkækstən]
biographical name
William circa 1422–1491 1st English printer
1811年,“由威廉· Caxton(约逝世于1491年)印刷的一本书,他是一位在荷兰的英国商人,在那里学习了印刷技术并将其引入英国。这个姓氏来自于剑桥郡的一个地方,字面意思是“Kak 的地产”,源自于古诺尔斯语的个人名字 Kakkr。
1 The lines painted in Caxton Street, Westminster have been painted between a taxi rank and some parking bays.
2 Caxton was an entrepreneur as well as innovator and printed his own adverts urging people to call into his printing shop to buy their own copy.
3 Caxton was founded by Bruce Kovner who ran the fund for 28 years before tapping his chief investment officer Law to run it in 2011.
4 “It just kept saying ‘connection lost, in offline mode’ or words to that effect every 5/10 minutes,” subscriber Michael Brown, a market analyst at currency firm Caxton, told Reuters.
5 Marks ran European government bond and interest rate swap trading at Goldman Sachs’ London office in the late 1990s and later managed a $2 billion portfolio for billionaire Bruce Kovner’s Caxton Associates hedge fund.
6 But when William Caxton set up the first press in England, in 1476, he started to print books in English — often his own translations, with scholarly prefaces.
7 In 1481, Caxton brought out “The History of Reynard the Fox,” a translation—by him, into his late Middle English—of what was basically a thirteenth-century Dutch version.
8 Pages printed more than 500 years ago by William Caxton, who brought printing to England, have been discovered by the University of Reading.
9 Caxton's CGI fund also profited from the difference between Japanese and U.S. stock prices, the sources said, adding that losses on commodities bets in gold and a yen hedge detracted from performance.
10 Caxton turns out to be facing his own existential crisis.
11 He was also hailed for keeping Caxton’s original manuscript intact at Cambridge University after part of it was bought by an American dealer.
12 The popular image of him slaying a dragon started to achieve mass appeal after it was published in 1483 by William Caxton, the English printer, in a book called The Golden Legend.
13 One of the earliest recipients of a royal warrant was England's first printer, William Caxton, in 1476, but it was during Queen Victoria's reign - and the industrial revolution - that they flourished, says Peck.
14 Connolly has since published an equally delightful story about the Caxton Library: “Holmes on the Range” — about the sleuth of Baker Street — can be found in “Night Music: Nocturnes 2.”
15 Caxton Street, which runs toward the stadium and is usually swarming with fans on a game night, was quiet.
16 In the book's epilogue, Caxton said "In the writing of the same my pen is worn, mine hand weary and not steadfast, mine eyes dimmed with overmuch looking on the white paper".
17 A good compositor, "minding his Ps and Qs", could lay out a line of type, upside down, and backwards, in a matter of seconds, as quick as Caxton.
18 The big firms that reported losses last year include Bridgewater Associates, the firm founded by the outspoken billionaire Ray Dalio, and Caxton Associates.
19 But it was not until the 15th and 16th Century that "Arthur Mania" reached its heights after William Caxton published Thomas Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur.
20 In an epilogue, Caxton wrote that, after receiving an English translation of the French version of “The Dictes,” he read the manuscript and “found nothing discordant therein”—well, except for one thing.
1 威廉
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