scotchtape
See also: Scotch tape
English
Noun
scotchtape (uncountable)
- Adhesive tape, sometimes figuratively.
- 1945, American Management Association, Making the Most of Packaging Material, numbers 13-15, page 38:
- Applied to a sheet of cardboard, the net result is the equivalent of a large sheet of scotchtape, against which the container can be placed, obviating the danger of slippage or movement inside the packing.
- 1993, Kusuma Aṃsala, Sheltering Shadows, page 53:
- And the scotchtape of enduring relationship seals your lips.
- 2013, Ronald D. Cohen, James Capaldi, The Pete Seeger Reader:
- He is known to go out on a stage before a thousand people (who have paid hardearned cash for tickets) and, sticking the words of a song with scotchtape to the microphone, sing them for the first time in his life.
- 2014, David Lovett, Return 2 Terror: With Love, page 265:
- Its wing was broken and we made a sling with toothpicks and scotchtape and when it was better we both took it to the backyard and opened the shoebox and let it go.
Verb
scotchtape (third-person singular simple present scotchtapes, present participle scotchtaping, simple past and past participle scotchtaped)
- To apply scotchtape.
- 1977, George S. T. Chu, The Kidney Patient: A Socio-medical Study, page 6:
- A memo prohibiting memos from being scotchtaped to walls is scotchtaped to the wall.
- 1985, Carol Morris, Ironing Scott's Zen Suit, page 67:
- I surreptiously scotchtape a piece of fuzz swiped from the office aspirin bottle to the seat of my pants.
- 1987, Iowa English Bulletin, volumes 35-39, page 82:
- He ended up scotchtaping the words inside a drawer for her to read.
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