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Hornbook   Listen
noun
Hornbook  n.  
1.
The first book for children, or that from which in former times they learned their letters and rudiments; so called because a sheet of horn covered the small, thin board of oak, or the slip of paper, on which the alphabet, digits, and often the Lord's Prayer, were written or printed; a primer. "He teaches boys the hornbook."
2.
A book containing the rudiments of any science or branch of knowledge; a manual; a handbook.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Hornbook" Quotes from Famous Books



... glass is fastened over a framed picture. Thus the children could see the letters and words under the horn, but were not able to deface or tear the paper. It was difficult to get books in those days, and a hornbook would ...
— Stories of New Jersey • Frank Richard Stockton

... tracts or pamphlets was the comparatively well-known "Gull's Hornbook." This brilliant and vivid little satire is so rich in simple humor, and in life-like photography taken by the sunlight of an honest and kindly nature, that it stands second only to the author's masterpiece in prose, "The Bachelor's Banquet," which has waited so ...
— The Age of Shakespeare • Algernon Charles Swinburne



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