Difference between revisions of "Quire"
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A '''quire''' may be either: | A '''quire''' may be either: | ||
| − | *a measure of quantity of paper. This has varied through history between 4 and 25 sheets - it is now settled as one twentieth of a [[ream]], although a ream also has varied. French and Italian paper-makers sold 25 sheets in a quire; English and Dutch only sold 24 sheets. The standard measure now is 25 sheets to the quire, 20 quires to the ream =500 sheets in a ream. | + | *a measure of quantity of paper. This has varied through history between 4 and 25 sheets - it is now settled as one twentieth of a [[ream]], although a ream also has varied. French and Italian paper-makers sold 25 sheets in a quire; English and Dutch only sold 24 sheets. The standard measure now is 25 sheets to the quire, 20 quires to the ream = 500 sheets in a ream. |
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| + | ::'''''[[etymology|Etymological]] note''''': this word is the same as the French ''cahier'', which now means 'exercise book', but began as a bookbinder's term meaning 'a gathering': 'the collection of loose sheets in order', 'leaves of paper folded and placed, or 'nested', inside one another'. See also [[The Kingis Quair]]. | ||
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*An almost obsolete spelling of [[Choir - quire|choir]]. | *An almost obsolete spelling of [[Choir - quire|choir]]. | ||
Latest revision as of 02:49, 25 March 2014
A quire may be either:
- a measure of quantity of paper. This has varied through history between 4 and 25 sheets - it is now settled as one twentieth of a ream, although a ream also has varied. French and Italian paper-makers sold 25 sheets in a quire; English and Dutch only sold 24 sheets. The standard measure now is 25 sheets to the quire, 20 quires to the ream = 500 sheets in a ream.
- Etymological note: this word is the same as the French cahier, which now means 'exercise book', but began as a bookbinder's term meaning 'a gathering': 'the collection of loose sheets in order', 'leaves of paper folded and placed, or 'nested', inside one another'. See also The Kingis Quair.
- An almost obsolete spelling of choir.