Exercise book

(Formed " staple " in the 16th century ) A booklet or fascicle consists of stapled sheets of paper and usually one associated with them envelope.

Originally meant by stapling only unprinted write and sketch pads, the term expanded to printed publications smaller scale such as brochures or magazines and stapled shaped parts of a delivery station, taken together, after full appearance in the behalf of the client could be bound by the bookbinder to a book. The nested after folding and trimming of a printed sheet pages of books and newspapers are derived from known today as a booklet.

Books in the original sense are today mainly still as exercise books, sketchbooks, College blocks and the like. widespread. Notebooks are usually lined light in most countries to facilitate the holding of the line; so-called letter- books for primary education have per line lineation of four lines, which limit the x-heights, upper and lower lengths of the letters. Writing books for students in China are divided accordingly into rectangles. Computing books are - the Chinese copybooks comparable - divided into squares with guides to facilitate the calculation. Special music printed to the transcript of musical notes consist of empty staves, partly provided with guides.

In addition, there are a variety of specifications for special tasks outside the school such as accounting, but who have lost heavily by the use of computers in importance.

The octavo format of the booklets was to standardize the sizes of paper folded sheets of a common production format. Today, as octavo notebook applies a Din -A6 booklet.

Exercise book with writing exercises, 1929

Page from a biology book from 1944

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