pasteboard
English
Noun
pasteboard (countable and uncountable, plural pasteboards)
- (usually uncountable) Card stock.
- 1851, Herman Melville, Moby Dick:
- All visible objects, man, are but as pasteboard masks.
- 1912, Howard Roger Garis, Larry Dexter and the Stolen Boy:
- He handed Larry two slips of pasteboard, theater tickets, as was evident at first glance.
- 1939 November, R. S. Tayler, “A Railway Journey”, in Railway Magazine, page 336:
- To many, a railway ticket is but an uninteresting bit of pasteboard, which must be purchased before a journey is undertaken, and once obtained, may be stowed away in a convenient pocket and forgotten, until a watchful railway official requests its production.
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- (computing, countable) A widget allowing multiple users to paste and share text or other items.
- (slang, obsolete) A person's visiting card.
- 1848 November – 1850 December, William Makepeace Thackeray, chapter 37, in The History of Pendennis. […], volume (please specify |volume=I or II), London: Bradbury and Evans, […], published 1849–1850, →OCLC:
- “We shall only have to leave our pasteboards, Arthur.” He used the word ‘pasteboards,’ having heard it from some of the ingenuous youth of the nobility about town, and as a modern phrase suited to Pen’s tender years.
- 1860, William Johnson Neale, Paul Periwinkle: Or, The Pressgang, page 18:
- […] he no sooner learnt that the British officer in command had sent in his pasteboard, than he instantly returned the visit […]
- 1894, Paul Leicester Ford, The Honorable Peter Stirling and What People Thought of Him, page 47:
- Peter called on the Pierces, only to find them out, and as no notice was taken of his pasteboard, he drew his own inference, and did not repeat the visit.
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Translations
Adjective
pasteboard (not comparable)
- (figurative) unsubstantial; flimsy
- 1955, The Junior Bookshelf, volume 19, page 241:
- A poor, pasteboard story. The conventional, unattractive heroine is recovering from an illness in Rome. She is discontented and sorry for herself because her planned career as a sports mistress has now to be abandoned.
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References
- Chambers's Twentieth Century Dictionary (1908).
- “pasteboard”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
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