a written or printed work consisting of pages glued or sewn together along one side and bound in covers
an electronic version of a printed book that can be read on a computer or handheld device designed specifically for this purpose
an organization that sells selected books to members or subscribers, often from a mail-order catalog
a formal style of handwriting as used by professional copiers of books before the invention of printing
(in a spider or other arachnid) each of a pair of respiratory organs composed of many fine leaves. They are situated in the abdomen and have openings on the underside
the title given to any of various official books of economic or political significance
a summary and analysis of economic activity and conditions, prepared with the aid of reports from the district Federal Reserve Banks and issued by the central bank of the Federal Reserve for its policy makers before a Federal Open Market Committee meeting
a book containing a list of secret contacts, or of the names of people liable to be punished
a group of people who meet regularly to discuss books that all the members have read
reserve (something, especially a seat or a hotel room) for two different customers or parties at the same time
a book of a kind popular in medieval and Renaissance Europe, containing drawings accompanied by allegorical interpretations
a book in which a surveyor or other technician or scientist writes down measurements and other technical notes taken in the field
a book in which orders are entered as they are received by a business, especially regarded as a measure of the organization’s success
a book for people visiting a foreign country, listing useful expressions in the language of the country together with their equivalent in the visitor’s own language
a book containing the forms of prayer regularly used in Christian worship, especially the Book of Common Prayer
an official document entitling the holder to a ration of food, clothes, or other goods
a book used by a business to keep records of quantities of goods acquired, held in stock, and disposed of
a book published by a commercial publisher and intended for general readership
a book of rules, standards, or records, especially an official government report, bound in white
an illustrated literary periodical published quarterly in the UK between 1894 and 1897, associated with the Aesthetic Movement. Often controversial, it contained contributions from writers including Max Beerbohm, Henry James, Edmund Gosse, Arnold Bennett, and H. G. Wells. The art editor was Aubrey Beardsley
a book for recording the names, addresses, and telephone numbers of friends, businesses, etc.
a book containing recipes and other information about the preparation and cooking of food