To submit official papers to (a law court, etc.).
To apply paper to.
To paste the endpapers and flyleaves at the beginning and end of a book before fitting it into its covers.
To enfold in paper.
To document; to memorialize.
To fill (a theatre or other paid event) with complimentary seats.
To give public notice (typically by displaying posters) that a person is wanted by the police or other authority.
To sandpaper.
Insubstantial (from the weakness of common paper)
Made of paper.
Planned (from plans being drawn up on paper)
Having a title that is merely official, or given by courtesy or convention.
A written document that reports scientific or academic research and is usually subjected to peer review before publication in a scientific journal (as a journal article or the manuscript for one) or in the proceedings of a scientific or academic meeting (such as a conference, workshop, or symposium).
A sheet material used for writing on or printing on (or as a non-waterproof container), usually made by draining cellulose fibres from a suspension in water.
A scholastic essay.
A written document, generally shorter than a book (white paper, term paper), in particular one written for the Government.
Any financial assets other than specie.
A paper packet containing a quantity of items.
Wallpaper.
A newspaper or anything used as such (such as a newsletter or listing magazine).
An open hand (a handshape resembling a sheet of paper), that beats rock and loses to scissors. It loses to lizard and beats Spock in rock-paper-scissors-lizard-Spock.
Wrapping paper.
A set of examination questions to be answered at one session.
Money.
A university course.
A medicinal preparation spread upon paper, intended for external application.
A substance resembling paper secreted by certain invertebrates as protection for their nests and eggs.
To give legal status to by making an official public record.
To fix in a medium, usually in a tangible medium.
To make a record of information.
To make an audio or video recording of.
To make an audio, video, or multimedia recording.
Enough to break previous records and set a new one; world-class; extreme.
The most extreme known value of some variable, particularly that of an achievement in competitive events.
A set of data relating to a single individual or item.
An item of information put into a temporary or permanent physical medium.
A data structure similar to a struct, in some programming languages such as C and Java based on classes and designed for storing immutable data.
Any instance of a physical medium on which information was put for the purpose of preserving it and making it available for future reference.