Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Wikipedia
First Edition is the debut album by New Zealand hip-hop artist, Dei Hamo released in 2005. The album charted at #13 on the New Zealand Albums Chart.
First Edition is a 1977 American short documentary film directed by Helen Whitney. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short.
First Edition was the early evening news programme on the Irish television network TV3. It was produced by the TV3 News division.
First Edition, presented by main newscasters Alan Cantwell and Colette Fitzpatrick, was a thirty-minute news programme covering Irish national and international news stories, broadcast at 5:30pm from Monday to Sunday.
First Edition is a debut album from the British group Paper Lace released in 1972.
First edition is the first set of copies of a book printed from substantially the same setting of type.
(The) First edition may also refer to:
First Edition is an Australian breakfast television news program broadcast on Sky News Australia. The program is currently co-hosted by Brooke Corte and Kieran Gilbert. The program is one of four breakfast news programs in Australia, competing with Sunrise, Today and ABC News Breakfast. The program airs seven days a week.
The program is unusual for the fact that since 2014 it is broadcast from two locations, with Corte co-hosting from the Sky News centre in the Sydney suburb of Macquarie Park, and Gilbert hosting from studios in Parliament House, Canberra. Additionally, the program also transitions into political commentary program AM Agenda at 8:30am AEST, which Gilbert hosts solo.
Weekend editions of the program were trimmed with the launch of Saturday Edition and Sunday Edition from 9 July 2016.
First Edition is a 1981 album by the jazz pianist George Shearing and the guitarist Jim Hall.
Usage examples of "first edition".
The most important of these is the Rationale diuinorum officiorum, the first edition of which by Fust and Schoeffer as issued at Mainz in 1459.
The jewel of the title is an enormous ruby carved like a scarab (illustrated on the cover and title-page of the first edition), embellished by hieroglyphics and a clear design of seven stars in the exact contemporary position of the stars in the Plough constellation.