a handwritten or printed work of fiction or nonfiction, usually on sheets of paper fastened or bound together within covers.
a work of fiction or nonfiction in an electronic format: Your child can listen to or read the book online.See also e-book (def. 1).
a number of sheets of blank or ruled paper bound together for writing, recording business transactions, etc.
a division of a literary work, especially one of the larger divisions.
the Book,the Bible.
Music. the text or libretto of an opera, operetta, or musical.
books.book of account.
Jazz. the total repertoire of a band.
a script or story for a play.
a record of bets, as on a horse race.
Cards. the number of basic tricks or cards that must be taken before any trick or card counts in the score.
a set or packet of tickets, checks, stamps, matches, etc., bound together like a book.
anything that serves for the recording of facts or events: The petrified tree was a book of Nature.
Sports. a collection of facts and information about the usual playing habits, weaknesses, methods, etc., of an opposing team or player, especially in baseball: The White Sox book on Mickey Mantle cautioned pitchers to keep the ball fast and high.
Stock Exchange.
the customers served by each registered representative in a brokerage house.
a loose-leaf binder kept by a specialist to record orders to buy and sell stock at specified prices.
a pile or package of leaves, as of tobacco.
Mineralogy. a thick block or crystal of mica.
a magazine: used especially in magazine publishing.
book value.
Slang. bookmaker (def. 1).
the book,
a set of rules, conventions, or standards: The solution was not according to the book but it served the purpose.
the telephone book: I've looked him up, but he's not in the book.
verb (used with object)
to enter in a book or list; record; register.
to reserve or make a reservation for (a hotel room, passage on a ship, etc.): We booked a table at our favorite restaurant.
to register or list (a person) for a place, transportation, appointment, etc.: The travel agent booked us for next week's cruise.
to engage for one or more performances.
to enter an official charge against (an arrested suspect) on a police register.
to act as a bookmaker for (a bettor, bet, or sum of money): The Philadelphia syndicate books 25 million dollars a year on horse racing.
verb (used without object)
to register one's name.
to engage a place, services, etc.
Slang.
to study hard, as a student before an exam: He left the party early to book.
to leave; depart: I'm bored with this party, let's book.
to work as a bookmaker: He started a restaurant with money he got from booking.
adjective
of or relating to a book or books: the book department; a book salesman.
derived or learned from or based on books: a book knowledge of sailing.
shown by a book of account: The firm's book profit was $53,680.
Verb Phrases
book in,to sign in, as at a job.
book out,to sign out, as at a job.
book up,to sell out in advance: The hotel is booked up for the Christmas holidays.
Idioms for book
bring to book, to call to account; bring to justice: Someday he will be brought to book for his misdeeds.
by the book, according to the correct or established form; in the usual manner: an unimaginative individual who does everything by the book.
close the books, to balance accounts at the end of an accounting period; settle accounts.
cook the books, Informal. cook1 (def. 13)
in one's bad books, out of favor; disliked by someone: He's in the boss's bad books.
in one's book, in one's personal judgment or opinion: In my book, he's not to be trusted.
in one's good books, in favor; liked by someone.
like a book, completely; thoroughly: She knew the area like a book.
make book,
to accept or place the bets of others, as on horse races, especially as a business.
to wager; bet: You can make book on it that he won't arrive in time.
off the books, done or performed for cash or without keeping full business records: especially as a way to avoid paying income tax, employment benefits, etc.: Much of his work as a night watchman is done off the books.
one for the book / books, a noteworthy incident; something extraordinary: The daring rescue was one for the book.
on the books, entered in a list or record: He claims to have graduated from Harvard, but his name is not on the books.
throw the book at, Informal.
to sentence (an offender, lawbreaker, etc.) to the maximum penalties for all charges against that person.
to punish or chide severely.
without book,
from memory.
without authority: to punish without book.
write the book, to be the prototype, originator, leader, etc., of: So far as investment banking is concerned, they wrote the book.
Origin of book
before 900; Middle English, Old English bōc; cognate with Dutch boek,Old Norse bōk,German Buch; akin to Gothic boka letter (of the alphabet) and not of known relation to beech, as is often assumed
She waited for my rant to finish and then reminded me that the book, still in my hand, was one I had pulled from her own bookshelf.
How Laurence Fishburne Gave Voice To ‘The Autobiography Of Malcolm X’|Joi-Marie McKenzie|September 17, 2020|Essence.com
I defy you to read the book—or, worse, review the Twitter commentary about it—and come away feeling good about the prospects for American comity.
Democracy depends on Washington improving its tech|Adam Lashinsky|September 17, 2020|Fortune
Such deals aren’t typically part of Warren Buffett’s play book, although in 2018 Berkshire invested in the initial offering of Brazilian fintech StoneCo Ltd.
Here’s who made a killing from Snowflake’s blockbuster IPO|Verne Kopytoff|September 16, 2020|Fortune
On the other side, in March everyone who booked a trip cancelled it.
Are you ready to start traveling for work again? TripActions’ CEO is banking on it|Michal Lev-Ram, writer|September 15, 2020|Fortune
More than two decades ago, I wrote a book with my New York Times colleagues Judith Miller and Bill Broad called “Germs” that looked at the modern history of biological warfare.
America Is About to Lose Its 200,000th Life to Coronavirus. How Many More Have to Die?|by Stephen Engelberg|September 14, 2020|ProPublica
Yet this, in the end, is a book from which one emerges sad, gloomy, disenchanted, at least if we agree to take it seriously.
Houellebecq’s Incendiary Novel Imagines France With a Muslim President|Pierre Assouline|January 9, 2015|DAILY BEAST
At some point during his busy schedule, Israel found the time to write a book, titled The Global War on Morris.
Powerful Congressman Writes About ‘Fleshy Breasts’|Asawin Suebsaeng|January 7, 2015|DAILY BEAST
Completed in 1953 and composed with standard line breaks and punctuation, the book was completely ignored upon submission.
The Lost Novel of Nobel-Winner José Saramago|Charles Shafaieh|January 5, 2015|DAILY BEAST
Perhaps, as Dwight Garner wrote, Steinberg just needed an idea for a book.
Was ‘The Book of Mormon’ a Great American Novel?|Stefan Beck|January 4, 2015|DAILY BEAST
Fred Logevall at Cornell won the Pulitzer Prize and is a diplomatic historian; he just started a book on Kennedy.
Thank Congress, Not LBJ for Great Society|Julian Zelizer, Scott Porch|January 4, 2015|DAILY BEAST
Seeing that they looked at the book, I turned the page quickly to hide the note.
Eastern Nights - and Flights|Alan Bott
And in the book it said, "It can be maintained that the evil of pride consists in being out of proportion to the universe."
Tremendous Trifles|G. K. Chesterton
The omission of the book numbered 88 will also have been remarked.
Immortal Memories|Clement Shorter
On the hand lying upon the book there fell a bright sunbeam.
Christian Gellert's Last Christmas|Berthold Auerbach
The Book of Jonah was written directly in rebuke of one form of Jewish exclusiveness.
Expositor's Bible: Ezra, Nehemiah, and Esther|Walter Adeney
British Dictionary definitions for book
book
/ (bʊk) /
noun
a number of printed or written pages bound together along one edge and usually protected by thick paper or stiff pasteboard coversSee also hardback, paperback
a written work or composition, such as a novel, technical manual, or dictionary
(as modifier)the book trade; book reviews
(in combination)bookseller; bookshop; bookshelf; bookrack
a number of blank or ruled sheets of paper bound together, used to record lessons, keep accounts, etc
(plural)a record of the transactions of a business or society
the script of a play or the libretto of an opera, musical, etc
a major division of a written composition, as of a long novel or of the Bible
a number of tickets, sheets, stamps, etc, fastened together along one edge
bookmakinga record of the bets made on a horse race or other event
(in card games) the number of tricks that must be taken by a side or player before any trick has a scoring valuein bridge, six of the 13 tricks form the book
strict or rigid regulations, rules, or standards (esp in the phrases according to the book, by the book)
a source of knowledge or authoritythe book of life
a telephone directory (in the phrase in the book)
the book(sometimes capital)the Bible
an open booka person or subject that is thoroughly understood
a closed booka person or subject that is unknown or beyond comprehensionchemistry is a closed book to him
bring to bookto reprimand or require (someone) to give an explanation of his conduct
close the book onto bring to a definite endwe have closed the book on apartheid
close the booksaccountingto balance accounts in order to prepare a statement or report
cook the booksinformalto make fraudulent alterations to business or other accounts
in my bookaccording to my view of things
in someone's bad booksregarded by someone with disfavour
in someone's good booksregarded by someone with favour
keep the booksto keep written records of the finances of a business or other enterprise
on the books
enrolled as a member
registered or recorded
read someone like a bookto understand a person, or his motives, character, etc, thoroughly and clearly
throw the book at
to charge with every relevant offence
to inflict the most severe punishment on
verb
to reserve (a place, passage, etc) or engage the services of (a performer, driver, etc) in advanceto book a flight; to book a band
(tr)to take the name and address of (a person guilty of a minor offence) with a view to bringing a prosecutionhe was booked for ignoring a traffic signal
(tr)(of a football referee) to take the name of (a player) who grossly infringes the rules while playing, two such acts resulting in the player's dismissal from the field
(tr)archaicto record in a book
See also book in, book into, book out, book up
Word Origin for book
Old English bōc; related to Old Norse bōk, Old High German buoh book, Gothic bōka letter; see beech (the bark of which was used as a writing surface)
see balance the books; black book; bring to book; by the book; closed book; close the books; cook the books; crack a book; hit the books; in one's book; in someone's bad graces (books); judge a book by its cover; know like a book; make book; nose in a book; one for the books; open book; take a leaf out of someone's book; throw the book at; wrote the book on.