Imprint
late Middle English (originally as emprint ): from Old French empreinter, based on Latin imprimere, from in- ‘into’ + premere ‘to press’.
wiktionary
From Old French empreinte, from the past participle of empreindre, from Latin imprimere
From Middle English emprinten, enprinten, from Old French empreinter, from the past participle of empreindre, from Latin imprimere
etymonline
imprint (v.)
formerly also emprint, late 14c., imprenten, emprenten, "to mark by pressure, stamp; to impress on the mind or memory," from Old French empreinter "to stamp, engrave, imprint," from empreinte "mark, impression, imprint" (13c.), noun use of fem. past participle of eimpreindre "to impress, imprint," from Vulgar Latin *impremere, from Latin imprimere "to impress, imprint," from assimilated form of in- "into, in, on, upon" (from PIE root *en "in") + premere "to press, hold fast, cover, crowd, compress" (from PIE root *per- (4) "to strike").
imprint (n.)
mid-15c., emprente "an imprint or mark, impression made by printing or stamping," from Old French empreinte "mark, impression, imprint" (see imprint (v.)). Meaning "publication information of a book" (1790) is directly from the verb.