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pamphlet
[ pam-flit ]
noun
- a complete publication of generally less than 80 pages stitched or stapled together and usually having a paper cover.
- a short treatise or essay, generally a controversial tract, on some subject of contemporary interest:
a political pamphlet.
pamphlet
/ ˈ±èæ³¾´Ú±ôɪ³Ù /
noun
- a brief publication generally having a paper cover; booklet
- a brief treatise, often on a subject of current interest, published in pamphlet form
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ±è²¹³¾î€ƒp³ó±ô±ð³Ù·²¹°ùy adjective
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of pamphlet1
Example Sentences
That backbench MP was none other than Rachel Reeves herself – in The Everyday Economy, a pamphlet she penned in 2018.
In the Trump age, Americans are in desperate need of a refreshed pass on Paine’s Common Sense pamphlets.
“Look at that mountain / Look at those trees,†he sings in the original recording as though he’s designing a tourism pamphlet.
As patriots readied for battle and loyalists clung to the British crown, Thomas Paine published “Common Sense,†a fiercely persuasive pamphlet that united Colonists to fight against monarchy in the name of self-rule.
They’re handing out pamphlets with information about the fires, along with masks, disposable oxygen canisters, food and other supplies.
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