Difference between revisions of "Dos à dos binding"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
m (Text replacement - "=References= <references />" to "") |
m (Text replacement - "{{en-noun}}" to "") |
||
| Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
=English= | =English= | ||
==Noun== | ==Noun== | ||
| − | + | ||
Borrowed from {{bor|en|fr|Dos à dos}} | Borrowed from {{bor|en|fr|Dos à dos}} | ||
Revision as of 13:41, 1 September 2020
This is a work in progress. Please be aware that there may be errors or incorrect translations, including spelling or transcription errors.
If you'd like to become a wiki editor and participate in the project, please send an email to Suzy, and include your desired user name in the email. You can also send suggestions for corrections, new words to be added, or compliments too!
English
Noun
Borrowed from Script error: No such module "etymology/templates".
- "A form of bookbinding in which two books, usually small and frequently of a complementary nature, e.g., a Psalter and New Testament, are bound back to back so that they open in opposite directions, one of the three boards being the common lower board of both volumes. The spines and fore edges are opposed. Their upper boards are usually either embroidered or covered with gold-tooled leather. However the dos à dos binding is picked up, it opens at the beginning of one of the two books."<ref name="Etherington">Roberts, Don., et al. Bookbinding and the Conservation of Books : a Dictionary of Descriptive Terminology. Library of Congress : For Sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. G.P.O., 1982.</ref>
Translations
- German:
,