Word Meanings - SCRAPBOOK - Book Publishers vocabulary database
A blank book in which extracts cut from books and papers may be pasted and kept.
Related words: (words related to SCRAPBOOK)
- PASTURER
One who pastures; one who takes cattle to graze. See Agister. - PASTICCIO
1. A medley; an olio. H. Swinburne. A work of art imitating directly the work of another artist, or of more artists than one. A falsified work of art, as a vase or statue made up of parts of original works, with missing parts supplied. - PASTORALLY
1. In a pastoral or rural manner. 2. In the manner of a pastor. - PASTORSHIP
Pastorate. Bp. Bull. - BLANKET STITCH
A buttonhole stitch worked wide apart on the edge of material, as blankets, too thick to hem. - PASTURELESS
Destitute of pasture. Milton. - PASTIME
That which amuses, and serves to make time pass agreeably; sport; amusement; diversion. - PASTORLESS
Having no pastor. - PASTURAGE
1. Grazing ground; grass land used for pasturing; pasture. 2. Grass growing for feed; grazing. 3. The business of feeding or grazing cattle. - BOOKSELLING
The employment of selling books. - PASTORLY
Appropriate to a pastor. Milton. - BOOKSTAND
1. A place or stand for the sale of books in the streets; a bookstall. 2. A stand to hold books for reading or reference. - BLANKET CLAUSE
A clause, as in a blanket mortgage or policy, that includes a group or class of things, rather than a number mentioned individually and having the burden, loss, or the like, apportioned among them. - PASTEURIZER
One that Pasteurizes, specif. an apparatus for heating and agitating, fluid. - WHICHEVER; WHICHSOEVER
Whether one or another; whether one or the other; which; that one which; as, whichever road you take, it will lead you to town. - BLANKETING
1. Cloth for blankets. 2. The act or punishment of tossing in a blanket. That affair of the blanketing happened to thee for the fault thou wast guilty of. Smollett. - PASTEURIAN
Of or pertaining to Pasteur. - BLANKNESS
The state of being blank. - BOOKSHOP
A bookseller's shop. - BLANKET
A piece of rubber, felt, or woolen cloth, used in the tympan to make it soft and elastic. 3. A streak or layer of blubber in whales. Note: The use of blankets formerly as curtains in theaters explains the following figure of Shakespeare. Nares. - REPASTURE
Food; entertainment. Food for his rage, repasture for his den. Shak. - TETRASPASTON
A machine in which four pulleys act together. Brande & C. - REPAST
L. repascere to feed again; pref. re- re- + pascere, pastum, to 1. The act of taking food. From dance to sweet repast they turn. Milton. 2. That which is taken as food; a meal; figuratively, any refreshment. "Sleep . . . thy best repast." Denham.