paperbound
Appearance
See also: paper-bound
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]paperbound (comparative more paperbound, superlative most paperbound)
- (not comparable, of a book) Having flexible covers; paperback; softcovered.
- 1935 March 4, “Inflation Letters”, in Time:
- Last week in collaboration with his longtime associate, Frederick Shelton, Editor Kiplinger published a paperbound booklet called Inflation Ahead!—What to do about it.
- (comparable) Involving or burdened by excessive administrative requirements, especially in the form of paperwork.
- 1995 October 16, Bronwyn Fryer, “More Than Just A Pretty (Inter)Face”, in InformationWeek, retrieved 14 Apr. 2009:
- The company has turned to In Touch to automate what had been a paperbound process.
- 2009 April 6, John Eligon, “State Law to Cap Public Defenders’ Caseloads, but Only in the City”, in New York Times, retrieved 14 Apr. 2009:
- “We need to bring this paperbound system into the 21st century,” he said.
Synonyms
[edit]- (burdened by excessive administration or paperwork): bureaucratic
Noun
[edit]paperbound (plural paperbounds)
- (dated) A paperback book.
- 1957, Top of the News, volumes 14-16, page 55:
- Few book budgets can stretch enough to provide for the desired duplicates, but the paperbounds cost so little that by using them heavy duplication is possible. We also find them useful for duplication of titles that have only occasional demand.