n
(humorous) Fear of running out of things to read.
n
The keeping of archives.
n
Synonym of armarius (“medieval monastery librarian”)
n
The librarian in a medieval monastery, who kept, repaired and catalogued its manuscripts and books.
n
The sort of people who read too much.
n
(rare) Destruction of books, especially of the Bible.
n
One who destroys books, especially the Bible.
n
Cultural diversity as applied to the world of writing and publishing.
n
The production of books or literature.
n
A person who compiles bibliographies, or who studies bibliography.
adv
Concerning bibliography.
adj
Rare spelling of bibliographic. [Of or pertaining to bibliography.]
adj
(sciences) Relating to biblioinformatics
n
A person who steals books
n
A mental disorder that produces a compulsion to steal books.
n
Alternative form of bibliolater [A worshipper of books, especially the Bible.]
n
Excessive admiration for a book.
adj
Relating to bibliology.
n
One who studies bibliology.
n
The study of the history of books and the art of printing.
n
A person who carries out bibliomancy.
n
A passion for owning valuable books.
adv
In a bibliomaniacal manner.
adj
(archaic) Exhibiting or relating to bibliomania; having an obsession with collecting books.
n
(obsolete) Great enthusiasm for books; bibliomania.
adj
Relating to bibliomancy.
adj
Of or pertaining to bibliometrics.
n
One who studies bibliometrics.
n
A practitioner of bibliometrics
n
The movement of books between geographical locations or physical or textual formats.
adj
Of or pertaining to bookbinding.
adj
Relating to bookbinding.
n
(figuratively) A person who loves to read books; a bookworm.
adj
devouring books (literally or figuratively)
n
(rare) A bibliophage; one who loves to read books.
n
The habit of voracious reading
n
(rare, philately) The collection or study of postage stamps and other philatelic material thematically related to books or libraries.
adv
In a bibliophilic manner.
n
A lover of books; a bibliophile.
n
One who who fears and hates books, book-learning or reading.
adj
averse to books, literature, or book-learning
n
(literary, rare) The making of books.
adj
(nonce word, obsolete) Concerned with bookselling.
adj
Of or relating to bookselling.
adj
Alternative form of bibliopolic [Of or relating to bookselling.]
adv
In terms of bookselling.
adj
Of or pertaining to bibliopolism.
n
Someone who does not return books after borrowing them.
n
(rare) One who "buries" books, typically by hoarding them unread, hiding them, locking them away, or otherwise shutting them up and keeping them from use
adj
Being or relating to a bibliotaph; hiding away books.
n
(rare) Synonym of bibliotaph
n
A bibliographer’s catalogue.
adj
Relating to libraries.
n
(rare) The study of libraries.
adj
Relating to bibliotherapy.
n
A therapist who provides bibliotherapy.
n
A nonpharmacological therapy using reading materials to meet people’s therapeutic or developmental needs.
adj
Pertaining to libraries.
adj
Of or pertaining to bibliotics
adj
Of or relating to a biobibliography.
adj
(dated) Relating to books printed at Zweibrücken in Bavaria.
adj
(by extension) Of or pertaining to the Bodleian Library.
n
The destruction, removal, or recalling of books, motion pictures, broadcasts, or electronic works as a form of censorship, especially motivated by religious or political objections to the material.
n
(literally) The discarding of quantities of books.
n
A person who loves reading books.
n
The practice of destroying books by fire because of moral, religious or political objections to the material they contain.
n
(rare) Person who vandalizes books by ripping their pages out and stealing them.
adj
Dominated or plagued by books.
n
Alternative form of bookworm [Any of various insects that infest books.]
n
(informal) A lover of books.
n
The practice of leaving a book in a public location to be found and read by others, who then do the same.
n
The realm or sphere of books.
n
(uncountable) study of or passion for books
n
A small, self-service library or bookstore.
n
(very rare, Anglo-Saxonism) collection of books, library
n
The illicit publication and distribution of banned books.
n
Factual information concerning books, for example regarding such matters as authors and the history of publication and printing.
adj
Of or pertaining to books; literary.
adj
(rare) Characteristic of a bookseller.
n
The online community and subculture of book lovers.
n
Any of various insects that infest books.
n
A fictitious vast library containing all possible 410-page books of a certain format, including books resulting from random concatenation of letters, spaces and punctuation marks.
n
The Chronicler (presumed author/redactor of the Book of Chronicles).
adj
An institution lending from its collection, especially of books, on condition of membership.
n
(historical) A library that circulated books among feepaying subscribers.
n
(dated) One versed in the ancient Egyptian demotic writing.
n
Synonym of language arts, the class dedicated to improving primary and secondary school students' mastery of English and the material taught in such classes.
n
The complete name of a person, including first name, any middle names, and surname.
n
Shelving of library books or similar works based on genre.
n
(literary, archaic) An insatiable and obsessive bookworm (“avid book reader”).
n
Someone interested in the field of incunabula.
n
The liberal arts, humanities, learning (broad accumulated cultural knowledge).
n
Pronunciation spelling of library. [An institution which holds books and/or other forms of media for use by the public or qualified people often lending them out, as well as providing various other services for its users.]
adj
Relating to, or involving, a libation.
adj
Pertaining to libation.
n
The trivium and the quadrivium.
n
The application of statistics and operations research to the running of a library.
adj
(rare) Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of a library, librarianship or librarians
n
One who cares for the publications, files etc. in a library, whether staff or volunteer.
n
Items related to libraries, especially collectibles.
adj
Resembling or characteristic of a librarian.
adj
Resembling or characteristic of a librarian.
adj
of or pertaining to books
n
(historical) An ancient or medieval scribe, copyist, or secretary.
n
An interdisciplinary science incorporating the humanities, law and applied science to study topics related to libraries, the collection, organization, preservation and dissemination of information resources, and the political economy of information.
n
The accumulation of a library of material.
adj
Of or pertaining to libration
n
Something that librates, or causes libration
n
(music) The study of librettos
n
(rare) The destruction of books.
adj
(botany) Resembling or having the form of liber, or bast
adj
Pertaining to the librigena.
n
Pronunciation spelling of library. [An institution which holds books and/or other forms of media for use by the public or qualified people often lending them out, as well as providing various other services for its users.]
n
2011-05-19, David Marsh, “'The British style'? 'The American way?' They are not so different”, in (Please provide the book title or journal name), London: Guardian Media Group, retrieved 2015-09-24:
adj
Of or relating to a manuscript.
n
The department of a library where damaged books are repaired.
n
A fictional book of arcane and forbidden knowledge whose contents can drive a person mad.
adj
Relating to pamphlets.
adj
(obsolete) Fond of books; devoted to literature.
n
The love of learning or literature.
n
(rare) Any society devoted to literature and the arts.
adj
Of or pertaining to the psalterium.
adj
(philosophy) Of or relating to quodlibet.
adj
Of or relating to a quodlibet
n
(slang) One who loves to read books; a bookworm.
n
Alternative letter-case form of schwebeablaut [(Indo-European studies) The phenomenon or process of metathesis in a Proto-Indo-European root between the vowel and a neighbouring sonorant, which led to both possible full grades existing, e.g. *grebʰ- and *gerbʰ-.]
adj
(rare) Not bibliophilic.
n
(neologism) The pensive nostalgia and temporality of used bookstores; the feeling evoked by the scent of old books or paper.
n
(rare) enthusiasm for vellum manuscripts
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