Parts of the Book
4 Major Divisions of the Book
1.) Binding - it protects the book
a. Cover
b. Spine
c. End Page
2.) Preliminary Pages
a. Fly Leaf - is an empty page of the book
b. Tittle Page - where the tittle and the author of the book are written
c. Copyright Page - is where the name of the publisher is written and the date when it was published
d. Acnowledgement - gives credit to the original author and the publisher of the materials
e. Preface - "Introduction" also known as Foreward, is where the purpose of the book is written
3.) Text - is known as the body of the book
4.) References
a. Glossary - small dictionary of the book
b. Bibliography - list of references on asubject
c. Index - contains important words which are arrange alphabetically according to pages
Reference: H.F.A. Reading Corner
The main parts of a book are the cover, title page, table of contents, body text, and back matter (including appendices and index). Each part serves a specific function: the cover attracts readers, the title page provides essential information, the table of contents outlines the structure of the book, the body text presents the main content, and back matter offers additional information or resources.
COVER = is where you can find the title of the book and the authors name.
COPYRIGHT = the date publish and the name of the manufacturer or the publisher.
PREFACE = the letter of the author to the readers.
TABLE OF CONTENTS = the list of the unit and the title of the topics.
BODY = is the exact pages you study and their actual pages.
INDEX = the list of the name or topics arrage alphabetically.
GLOSSARY = where you can find the meaning of the hard word arrage alphabetically.
Title Name of the book
Author Person who writes the book
Publisher Company who prints the book
Illustrator Person who draws the picture for a book
Preface Introduction to the book
Table of Contents List of chapters with their page numbers
Appendix Extra information put near the end of a book
Glossary Alphabetical list of definitions and pronunciations of special or unusual words
Index Alphabetical list of topics and their page numbers placed at the very end of a book
Text Main part of the book written by the author
Title page First page of a book which tells the title, author, illustrator, and publisher
Bibliography List of other books to read
Fly leaf (fly page)
This page faces the endsheet (which is glued to the book cover). This page is thicker and far more durable than the other pages in your book. Usually blank, this page is excellent for writing down basic formulas or fundamental notes which you will need again and again as you study from the book.
Title/Author page
The information on this page is fairly consistent. It contains the full title of the book, the edition, the name of the author, the author's academic affiliation (where the author was teacher when the book was written), and the book's publisher. If there is more than one author, all their names will appear on this page.
Copyright page
The book's copyright information is located prominently on this page. Copyright indicates the intellectual ownership of the book's content. There is often a paragraph explain who has the legal right to copy pages from the book. You will also find the Library of Congress call number, the International Standard Book Number (ISBN).
Preface
The preface is an introductory statement written by the author or authors specifically to the reader. The preface gives the author's reason and purpose for writing the book, and may include a summary of problems encountered while writing the book. The preface also attempts to describe the reader; for whom the book is meant. This should not be confused with the forward. The forward (sometimes spelled foreward) contains remarks about the book, usually written by someone other than the author.
Introduction
The introduction, like the preface, is by the author. However, here the author tells the reader what the book is about and how it should or might be used. For example, the author might indicate that experienced readers should begin with section two or that it is better to read the work through before attempting the exercises. If this is a second or subsequent edition, this where the author explains the changes and improvements.
Acknowledgements
This page, when it is included, is meant for the friends, family and colleagues of the author(s). This section is usually comprised of a paragraph thanking various people for their assistance, contribution and time in helping with the writing and publishing of the book.
Table of Contents
Basically an outline of the book, the table of contents lists the book's organization. This section demonstrates if the book is written in chapters, sections or units. Nowadays there may be two tables of contents; a brief and an expanded. The expanded is comprehensive and may breakdown the organization of the chapters. Essentially, the table of contents lists all the content focused text of the book.
Index
The index is a thoughtful list of words and topics taken from the text of the book. Written in alphabetical order, and organized so that it also reflects sub-topics, the index gives you an idea of the book's subject matter. Each word is followed by the page or multiple page numbers of every instance the word (or topic) appears in a meaningful context.
Credits
Textbooks often contain photographs, illustrations, visual aids (graphs, charts, tables, etc.) and other specifically designed non text material. These images were all created by someone, probably other than the author(s). The credits page lists the artists, photographers, designers and creators of the book's visuals. The visuals are considered intellectual property and ownership must be documented; that is the purpose of the credits page... a documentation of intellectual property rights for the book's non-text media.
Glossary
The glossary is a small dictionary designed specifically from the words or key terms used in the textbook. The definitions are only for the specialized usage in the book. Listed in alphabetical order, each entry is called a gloss. There is no set standard for how thorough the definition should be so some glossaries include pronunciation and the pages where the gloss is found in the text. Other glossaries only give the definition.
Appendix
Some textbooks have more than one appendix (plural appendixes or appendices) depending on the book's discipline. An appendix is a page or pages that contain a variety of information that is related to the book's topic, but not relegated to one specific chapter. For example, history books will often have maps and copies of important charters or treaties in appendixes. Math books will have a table of logarithms, and chemistry books contain the Periodic Table and other material.
References
Even though one, two or more authors write a textbook, the author does not make up the text. The information comes from many other places... called sources. A textbook author must list all of the books, articles, recordings, and other printed sources, that were used in the writing of the textbook. Whenever the author repeats or borrows from a source, and writes that information in the textbook, the original title and author of the source is listed in a section called references.
Bibliography
Authors read tremendous amounts of material when writing textbooks. The bibliography is a list of all the material read, that the author learned from, or contributed to his own ideas that are written in the book. Unlike the references, the bibliography does list works that were cited directly by the author, but instead indicates the bulk of knowledge acquired while researching for the book's content.
what are the four main parts of a keyboard and their function what are the four main parts of a keyboard and their function what are the four main parts of a keyboard and their function
14 parts of the book
what parts of leavs
part andv function of desktop publisher window
how are parts of birds & fish similar in structure & function
The function of drill parts is to collectively make the drill a precise and efficient tool.
aiie wala ?
As you enter a function, it puts up tip text to show you the parts of the function that are needed. It helps the user to put the function in, making it easier to use.As you enter a function, it puts up tip text to show you the parts of the function that are needed. It helps the user to put the function in, making it easier to use.As you enter a function, it puts up tip text to show you the parts of the function that are needed. It helps the user to put the function in, making it easier to use.As you enter a function, it puts up tip text to show you the parts of the function that are needed. It helps the user to put the function in, making it easier to use.As you enter a function, it puts up tip text to show you the parts of the function that are needed. It helps the user to put the function in, making it easier to use.As you enter a function, it puts up tip text to show you the parts of the function that are needed. It helps the user to put the function in, making it easier to use.As you enter a function, it puts up tip text to show you the parts of the function that are needed. It helps the user to put the function in, making it easier to use.As you enter a function, it puts up tip text to show you the parts of the function that are needed. It helps the user to put the function in, making it easier to use.As you enter a function, it puts up tip text to show you the parts of the function that are needed. It helps the user to put the function in, making it easier to use.As you enter a function, it puts up tip text to show you the parts of the function that are needed. It helps the user to put the function in, making it easier to use.As you enter a function, it puts up tip text to show you the parts of the function that are needed. It helps the user to put the function in, making it easier to use.
Private Parts - book - has 448 pages.
check
no
the engine