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Print/export Download as PDF; ... Media in category "Spanish film video covers" The following 40 files are in this category, out of 40 total. 0–9. File:3 Wise Men ...
A manila folder with a paperclip. A manila folder (sometimes referred to as manilla folder) is a file folder designed to contain documents, often within a filing cabinet.It is generally formed by folding a large sheet of stiff card in half.
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A pink Five Star Trapper Keeper. Trapper Keeper is a brand of loose-leaf binder created by Mead.Popular with students in the United States and parts of Latin America from the 1970s to the 1990s, it featured sliding plastic rings (instead of standard snap-closed metal binder rings), folders, and pockets to keep schoolwork and papers, and a wrap-around flap with a Velcro closure (originally a ...
Individuals usually purchase "thermal covers" or "therm-a-bind covers", which are usually made to fit a standard-size sheet of paper and come with a glue channel down the spine. The paper is placed in the cover, heated in a machine (resembling a griddle), and when the glue cools, it adheres the paper to the spine. Thermal glue strips can also ...
The inside back cover page, like that inside the front cover, is usually blank. The back cover is the usual place for the book's ISBN and maybe a photograph of the author(s)/ editor(s), perhaps with a short introduction to them. Also here often appear plot summaries, barcodes and excerpted reviews of the book.
Five Star sells Letter-sized loose leaves; Oxford and Mead sell 8 x 10.5 inch loose leaves. In libraries and print shops, hole punchers are regularly provided for punching 3 holes. Some bound notebooks have perforated lines for tearing off pages, and all pages have pre-punched holes, so that when torn off, they can be organized into a binder ...
However, for the Spanish dialectal lera 'vegetable garden, area of land' (Salamanca) is proposed a Latin origin *illam aream > *l'aream > laira, which don't appears to be appropriate for the Galician forms, already documented as larea and ipsa larea in 870. [77]