[ noun ] a typesetting machine operated from a keyboard that casts an entire line as a single slug of metal <noun.artifact>
Linotype \Lin"o*type\, n. [See {Line}; {Type}.] (Print.) (a) A kind of typesetting machine which produces castings, each of which corresponds to a line of separate types. By pressing the keys of a keyboard like one on a typewriter, the matrices for one line are properly arranged; the entire line, or stereotype, or slug, is then cast and planed, and the matrices are returned to their proper places, the whole process being automatic. (b) The slug produced by the machine, or matter composed in such lines. -- {Lin"o*typ`ist}, n. [Webster 1913 Suppl.]
Larry Strutton, president of Baltimore Sunpapers, was named president, publisher and chief executive officer of the Rocky Mountain News, where he began his career 26 years ago as a linotype operator.
He proudly tells of wearing out three linotype machines publishing in Pittsburgh, being part of an energetic Hungarian-language press that included some 50 newspapers across the country, many published daily.