Stationery
Encyclopedia : S : ST : STA : Stationery
- ''Note: This article title may be easily confused with Stationary
Originally the term "stationery" referred to all products sold by a stationer, whose name indicates that his book shop was on a fixed spot, usually near a university, and permanent, while medieval trading was mainly ambulant, by peddlers (including chapmen, who sold books) and others (such as farmers and craftsmen) at non-permanent markets such as fairs.
- By extension the term has been applied to decorative backgrounds that may be attached to e-mail correspondence (though this has never found favour) or to describe templates typically used by home users in desktop publishing software to make, for example, party invitations.
- The word is sometimes confused with the homophone adjective stationary, meaning "not moving", which is also derived from Latin statio. A mnemonic is "stationery has an e for envelope".
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