英:['peɪpəz]
美:['peɪpəz]
英:['peɪpəz]
美:['peɪpəz]
noun
a felted sheet of usually vegetable fibers laid down on a fine screen from a water suspension
a piece of paper
a piece of paper containing a written or printed statement : document
pedigree papers
a piece of paper containing writing or print
a formal written composition often designed for publication and often intended to be read aloud
presented a scholarly paper at the meeting
a piece of written schoolwork
a paper container or wrapper
newspaper
the negotiable notes or instruments of commerce
wallpaper sense 1
ticketsespecially: free passes
paperback
verb
transitive verb
archaic to put down or describe in writing
to fold or enclose in paper
to cover or line with paperespecially: to apply wallpaper to
to fill by giving out free passes
paper the theater for opening night
to cover (an area) with advertising bills, circulars, or posters
intransitive verb
to hang wallpaper
adjective
made of paper, cardboard, or papier-mâché
a paper bag
papery
of or relating to clerical work or written communication
existing only in theory : nominal
a paper blockade
admitted by free passes
a paper audience
finished with a crisp smooth surface similar to that of paper
paper taffeta
conference papers会议论文;研讨会论文
证件
Noun Middle English papir, from Anglo-French, from Latin papyrus papyrus, paper, from Greek papyros papyrus
The first known use of paper was in the 14th century
paper1 of 3noun
a thin sheet made usually from rags, wood, straw, or bark and used to write or print on, to wrap things in, or to cover walls
a sheet or piece of paper
a piece of paper having something written or printed on it
a written composition
newspaper
wallpaper
paper2 of 3verb
to cover or line with paper and especially wallpaper
paper a room
paper3 of 3adjective
of, relating to, or made of paper or cardboard paper mills
paper carton
papery
nuts with paper shells
nominal sense 1
1 “As soon as I get the papers on these wounded I’ll take you along the road and drop you with your medical officers.”
2 I’m escorted down to the lobby of the studio, where I sign some more papers before heading out to where my car is waiting.
3 Lev reaches overhead and takes down the viola and our modest bag with all our worldly possessions: our travel papers, a change of clothes, Lev's prayer book.
4 Surrounding them in a hushed, solemn circle were reporters from television stations and radio stations and the two local papers.
5 He dragged what papers he could out of the newsstand and got a bucket of water to douse the rest.
6 He's only in the door three seconds before he starts spouting some theory about spectral analysis and the refractive indices of protein substances, and he's carrying a big box full of books and papers.
7 I think of all of the red marks that cover my papers from teachers.
8 The station agent wouldn't have been allowed to sell a ticket to someone whose papers were marked Jood.
9 “There was lots of talk about him in the papers. His boys like him; they say ‘I fights mit Sigel’ like it’s a thing they’re proud about.”
10 The papers are fake, I know, but the money is real.
11 With great relief, Helmuth finishes his final thesis, turns it in, and on the last day of school, Herr Meins stands in front of the class, grasping the graded papers.
12 He gave a million dollars in seed money and hired an attorney to draw up papers for Partners in Health and its corresponding sister organization in Haiti, Zanmi Lasante.
13 Just then I remembered papers that were overdue; I had missed a lot of classes.
14 The two cards, one a familiar playing card and the other a tarot card emblazoned with an angel, are amongst the papers on the desk.
15 After days in which the Democratic nomination filled the papers, there came suddenly the thunderbolt of General McClellan’s response to his nomination.
16 They were not eminent people, and there are few records concerning them except for the usual papers on birth, marriage, land ownership, and death.
17 As people filed out of the room, Mr. Quisling tapped papers into an even pile on his desk.
18 The nurse picks up the papers that were resting on my knees and flips through them quickly.
19 A metal name plate sat on his desk in front of a large pile of papers, both typed and handwritten—AMHERST PINEVILLE, REGISTRAR.
20 “So give me some opinions. How is The Landry News different from the other papers you’ve been looking at—and how is it the same?”