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duodecimo
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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See also: duodécimo
English
Etymology
Latin ablative of duodecimus (“twelfth”) (from duodecim 'twelve', from duo 'two' + decem 'ten')
Noun
duodecimo (plural duodecimos)
- (paper, printing) A size of paper, so called because it is originally made by folding and cutting a single sheet from a printing press into 12 leaves; (5 by 7¾ inches): 6.5 to 7.5 inches high, approximately 4.5 inches wide.
- A sheet or page of that size.
- (printing) A book having pages of that size.
- 2015, William Logan, “A Critics Notebook”, in Guilty Knowledge, Guilty Pleasure, page 304:
- In recent years, I have taken to reading while walking. I believe the Romantics were guilty of such behavior; a duodecimo was small enough to fit into a jacket pocket.
Synonyms
Translations
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Dutch
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin in duodecimō (“in a twelfth”), from duodecimus (“twelfth”).
Pronunciation
Noun
duodecimo n (plural duodecimo's, diminutive duodecimootje n)
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Italian
Etymology
From Latin duodecimus.
Adjective
duodecimo (feminine duodecima, masculine plural duodecimi, feminine plural duodecime)
- (literary) twelfth
- Synonyms: (old-fashioned) decimosecondo, dodicesimo
Latin
Adjective
duodecimō
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