The Queen Loana Project
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2006-02-02
CHAPTER 3 Glossary
bigwig noun
[countable]
informal an important person
A few of the company bigwigs have their own jets.hiccup 1 noun 打嗝
[countable]
1
[usually plural]a sudden repeated stopping of the breath, usually caused by eating or drinking too fast
get/have hiccups BrE ; get/have the hiccups American English Don't drink so fast - you'll get hiccups.
2
a small problem or delay
hiccup in
a hiccup in the negotiationsgrandiose adjective
grandiose plans sound very important or impressive, but are not practical
grandiose scheme/plan/idea etc grandiose schemes of urban renewalswine noun
[countable]
1
plural swine or swines
informal someone who behaves very rudely or unpleasantly
Leave her alone, you filthy swine!
2
old use a pighurdle 1 noun
1
[countable]a problem or difficulty that you must deal with before you can achieve something 障碍
ᅳsynonym obstacleFinding enough money for the project was the first hurdle. overcome/clear/get over etc a hurdle(=deal successfully with a problem)
2
[countable]one of a series of small fences that a person or horse has to jump over during a race 篱笆
clear a hurdle (=successfully jump over a hurdle)
3
the 100 metres/400 metres hurdles 跨栏
a race in which the runners have to jump over hurdlessenile adjective
mentally confused or behaving strangely, because of old age
a senile old man She worries about going senile .slyboot 处世圆滑、不老实的人
floor 2 verb
floor [transitive]
1
to surprise or shock someone so much that they do not know what to say or do
A couple of the questions completely floored me.
2
to hit someone so hard that they fall down
He was floored in the first round of the fight.
3
American English informal to make a car go as fast as possible
I got into the car and floored it . -
2006-02-02
Glossary of Binding Terms
- http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/preserve/binding/glossary.htm#B
Adhesive Binding - Type of binding in which single leaves are secured together solely with an adhesive applied to the textblock spine. Animal glue, polyvinyl acetate glues, and hot melt adhesives are mostly used. Also known as perfect binding. See also, Double-Fan Adhesive binding
- Backing
- Process of shaping a ridge or shoulder on each side of the spine of a text block after rounding it, and prior to lining it. Backing accommodates the thickness of the boards, and provides a hinge along which they swing. Backing also helps to prevent the spine of the textblock from collapsing into a concave shape over time. See Rounding. (LBI Standard Glossary, p.13)
- Bench Sewing
- Any form of sewing through the fold by hand to attach signatures to form the textblock.
- Board
- General term used for pasteboard, millboard, strawboard, etc, all of which are used to form the foundation for book covers. They are made of various pulped or laminated fibrous materials pressed into large flat sheets, which are then cut to size and covered with cloth, leather, paper, or other material to form the book covers. Also called cover boards, or book boards.
- Book Cloth
- Specially prepared cloth material used as a covering material for book covers. A thin woven cloth (like muslin) that has been dyed, filled, impregnated, or coated with some compound, and subjected to heat and pressure. Book cloth falls into three main categories: 1. starch-filled (where the spaces in the cloth-weave are filled with starch, sometimes called sized book cloth), 2. acrylic-, pyrozylin- or vinyl-impregnated, and 3. plastic coated. Book cloth is lighter than buckram and comes in a variety of colors.
- Buckram Cloth
- A heavy weave cotton cloth filled, impregnated, or coated with different compounds (mainly starch and pyroxylin but also other materials) to enhance body, finish and durability.
- Case
- The cover of a book that consists of two boards, an inlay, and covering material. In a commercial bindery, the case is usually made separately from the text block and later attached to the text block later in a step called casing-in. (LBI Standard, Glossary, p.13)
- Casing-In
- Process of applying adhesive to the outermost endpapers of a textblock and fitting the text into its case. (LBI Standard, Glossary, p.14)
- Coated Paper
- Type of paper coated with white clay or a similar substance to provide a smooth surface for printing detailed illustrations. The finish is often glossy but can be dull.
- Double Fan Adhesive Binding
- A type of adhesive binding where the back margin of each leaf in an unglued textblock is exposed to 1/16" or less for an application of adhesive. The margin is exposed on both sides of each leaf by clamping the textblock on a vice-like press and then pushing against the textblock first in one direction, then the other, thereby fanning or separating the edges of the leaves. (LBI Standard, §6.3, p.5)
- Flat Back
- Also known as square back. A casebound textblock that has not been rounded or backed. (LBI Standard, Glossary, p.14)
- Flyleaf
- Leaf or leaves forming that part of the folded endsheet not pasted down to the inside of the cover board. Its function is to protect the first or last leaves of the textblock. See Pastedown.
- Fore Edge
- Edge of a leaf or a board opposite from, and parallel to, its binding edge (i.e. opposite from its spine edge). Fore edge is also used in a more general way to refer to any part of a volume opposite from and parallel to its spine. (LBI Standard, Glossary, p.14).
- Grain Direction
- Direction in which the majority of the fibers in a piece of paper or board are aligned and to the direction in which the warp threads run in cloth. Grain direction in all man-made materials used in bookbinding should run parallel to the spine of the volume. (LBI Standard, Glossary, p.14).
- Gutter
- Channel and combined marginal space formed by the two inner or back margins of facing pages of a volume. Margin along the spine.
- Head
- Top edge of a leaf, board, or bound volume, opposite from the surface on which the volume rests when it is shelved upright. (LBI Standard, Glossary, p.14)
- Headband
- Small, ornamental band, generally of mercerized cotton or silk, which in most modern publisher's trade bindings is glued on the head as well as the tail of the textblock spine of a book. Modern headbands imitate the sewn-on headbands that functioned to protect the head and tail of early bindings. The band at the tail of the book is sometimes called the tailboard.
- Hinge
- Flexible part of the cover on which the boards swing open. See also Inner Hinge and Outer Hinge.
- Hollow
- The part or space of a case binding between the textblock spine and the inside of the cover spine.
- Inner Hinge
- Fold of the channel lying between the two halves of an endsheet where the textblock is attached to its cover (case). Also called a front hinge and inner joint.
- Leaf
- Single sheet of paper or half of a folded sheet of paper. (LBI Standard, Glossary, p.15)
- Leaf Attachment
- Means by which leaves of a textblock are attached to one another along the binding edge. (LBI Standard, Glossary, p.15)
- Margin
- Space around the edges of a page outside the printed or written matter. The four margins are commonly designated as: head or top margin; tail, lower, or bottom margin; fore edge, outer or outside margin; and back, inner, or gutter margin.
- Milling
- The spines of books can be cut away on a milling machine to prepare them for double-fan adhesive binding or oversewing. The machine clamps the textblock, spine down, and moves it over a series of rotating blades that cut away approximately 1/8 inch of the binding margin, thus removing old adhesive, thread, staples, and/or the folds of signatures. After milling, a text block is comprised of loose leaves.
- Notching
- Process of cutting parallel grooves into the spine perpendicular to the binding edge to strengthen adhesive bindings (LBI Standard, Glossary, p.15).
- Outer hinge
- Flexible channel of covering material on the outside of a book on which the cover board opens; the space between the cover boards and the shoulder of the textblock spine in which the covering material is pressed. Also called a French joint or French groove, hinge, gully, channel, and outer joint.
- Oversewing
- Method of sewing thin sections (i.e., piles) of leaves, one to another in succession, to create a semi-flexible text block. For all oversewn volumes, a minimum binding margin of 5/8 inch (after milling) is desirable. (LBI Standard §6.1, p.3).
- Paste down
- The half of an endsheet that is pasted to the inside of the cover board.
- PVA (Polyvinyl acetate)
- An emulsion adhesive; a flexible adhesive that does not cross-link and is considered permanent. Results in a very strong bond.
- Recase
- Process of fitting the textblock with a new case when the original sewing thread of the textblock is unbroken and intact. (LBI Standard, §***, p.6)
- Rounding
- Process of hammering or manipulating the textblock spine into a convex shape preparatory to backing. Rounding diminishes the effect of swelling caused by the thickness of the sewing threads or the application of glue from an adhesive binding. It also helps to prevent the textblock spine from falling into a concave shape after years of use or of standing upright on a shelf. See also backing.
- Shoulder
- Outer edge of a rounded textblock spine against which the cover board fits. The shoulder is made when a book is rounded and backed. Also called a ridge, butt, flange, groove, abutment and ledge.
- Stubbing
- Process of adding sheets of paper to textblock to accommodate inserts. (Guide to the LBI Standard, §5.4, p.8)
- Tail
- Bottom edge of a leaf, board, or bound volume; that is, the surface on which a volume rests when shelved upright. (LBI Standard, Glossary, p.17)
- Textblock
- Leaves of a volume after they have been bound together. (LBI Standard, Glossary, p.17)
- Tip-in
- Thin line of adhesive is applied along the edge of a leaf (usually along the binding edge), and the leaf is tipped onto another leaf (usually at the binding edge). (LBI Standard, Glossary, p.17)
- http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/preserve/binding/glossary.htm#B







