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Definition of Sketch pad
1. Noun. A book containing sheets of paper on which sketches can be drawn.
Definition of Sketch pad
1. Noun. a book or pad with blank pages for sketching; a sketchbook ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Sketch Pad
Literary usage of Sketch pad
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Topographic Maps and Sketch Mapping by James Kip Finch (1920)
"THE sketch pad The sketching screen, while accurate and very useful to the ...
The horizontal and vertical lines on the sketch pad, with the aid of a piece ..."
2. Topographic Maps and Sketch Mapping by James Kip Finch (1920)
"THE sketch pad The sketching screen, while accurate and very useful to the
beginner, is clumsy and cannot be easily carried in the field. ..."
3. Technical Notes Prepared for the United States Army School of Military by School of Military Aeronautics (1918)
"For this purpose a standard sketch pad S^xS^k inches is divided by vertical lines
into ten %-inch strips the long way of the pad. ..."
4. Military Sketching and Map Reading by Loren Chester Grieves (1918)
"LESSON XX RANGE DATA The student should now be required to complete sketches on
the standard sketch pad in the manner shown in Fig. ..."
5. Proceedings of the United States Naval Institute by United States Naval Institute (1901)
"Each member of a properly equipped party should have: i bicycle, with cyclometer;
i sketch pad; i note-book; i foot rule; i pocket compass; i pocket aneroid ..."
6. The English Journal by National Council of Teachers of English (1919)
"A specification such as Rabelais' that must be read with sketch pad on knee,
while intelligible to architects, is hardly of vital interest to the ..."
7. A Manual of Engineering Drawing for Students and Draftsmen by Thomas Ewing French (1918)
"With the drawing board or sketch pad held perpendicular to the "line of sight"
from the eye to the object, the direction of a line is tested by holding the ..."
8. A Manual of Engineering Drawing for Students and Draftsmen by Thomas Ewing French (1918)
"With the drawing board or sketch pad held perpendicular to the "line of sight"
from the eye to the object, the direction of a line is tested by holding the ..."