book
Webster 1828
BOOK, noun [Like the Latin liber, book signifies primarily bark and beech, the tree being probably named from its bark.]A general name of every literary composition which is printed; but appropriately, a printed composition bound; a volume. The name is given also to any number of written sheets when bound or sewed together, and to a volume of blank paper, intended for any species of writing, as for memorandums, for accounts, or receipts.1. A particular part of a literary composition; a division of a subject in the same volume.2. A volume or collection of sheets in which accounts are kept; a register of debts and credits, receipts and expenditures, etc.In books, in kind remembrance; in favor.I was so much in his books, that at his decease he left me his lamp.Without book by memory; without reading; without notes; as, a sermon was delivered without book This phrase is used also in the sense of without authority; as, a man asserts without book BOOK, verb transitive To enter, write or register in a book