A photostatic copy is a reproduction of an original document created using a photostatic process, which involves the use of light and electrostatic charges to transfer an image onto paper. This method produces a highly accurate and detailed copy, often used for legal documents, manuscripts, and other important records. The term is derived from "photo" (light) and "static" (electric charge), highlighting the technology's reliance on both light and static electricity. Photostatic copies are valued for their durability and fidelity to the original document.
Will copy.
The present tense of "to copy" is: I copy You copy He/She/It copies They copy We copy I copy papers in the photocopier. He copies Jill's homework.
copy it by a copy machine
where do I go to copy where can I download a copy
Good Copy Bad Copy was created in 2007.
Hard Copy
a final copy is the last copy of a report
simulcrum I think!
Yes, the word copy is a verb (copy, copies, copying, copied). The word copy is also a noun (copy, copies).Example uses:Verb: I can copy my transcript at the library.Noun: I have to send a copy with my application.
To copy a CD that is not a copy you can get a RW CD. This is a CD that can have things copied onto it.
Copy Copy - 1992 is rated/received certificates of: Belgium:KT
The duration of Good Copy Bad Copy is 3540.0 seconds.