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貹辱-âé
[pey-per-muh-shey, -ma-, p
noun
a substance made of pulped paper or paper pulp mixed with glue and other materials or of layers of paper glued and pressed together, molded when moist to form various articles, and becoming hard and strong when dry.
adjective
made of 貹辱-âé.
easily destroyed or discredited; false, pretentious, or illusory.
a 貹辱-âé façade of friendship.
貹辱-âé
/ ˌpæpjeɪˈmæʃeɪ, papjemɑʃe /
noun
a hard strong substance suitable for painting on, made of paper pulp or layers of paper mixed with paste, size, etc, and moulded when moist
adjective
made of 貹辱-âé
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of 貹辱-âé1
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of 貹辱-âé1
Example Sentences
One of the most famous involved Frank Morris, and brothers Clarence and John Anglin, who escaped in June 1962 by placing 貹辱-âé heads in their beds and breaking out through ventilation ducts.
Without fail, there is at least one big movie every year that falls prey to the adage “style over substance,” a film that postures as an opus, but is really just filled with hot air and covered in 貹辱-âé with the word “masterpiece” scrawled all over its still-drying surface.
Above us were giant 貹辱-âé heads of alebrijes — colorful Mexican folk art figurines — used at LA Librería’s recent appearance at the L.A.
Her first intervention was to style the windows, which she thought were boring, adding mannequins and whimsical objects like 貹辱-âé dogs.
When Dav Pilkey came to town, Pettid and Cowdin welcomed him by making a three-and-a-half foot 貹辱-âé Captain Underpants.
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