I think you mean high folio lap. Individual forms or signatures are folded slightly off centre which leaves one side shorter than the other, the overlapping side is called the lap, depending if the form is face up or down determines wether it has a high folio or low folio lap.
A sheet of paper folded in half for a manuscript is called a folio. It is a common format for writing and organizing text.
A folio is a book size in which each sheet is folded once, resulting in two leaves, while a quarto is a book size in which each sheet is folded twice, resulting in four leaves. In other words, a folio has larger and fewer pages compared to a quarto.
hi my name is katerina
they over lap and cause mountains and hills Folded mountains are produced
The phrase "ponderous folio volume" typically refers to a large and heavy book, often containing extensive or weighty content. "Ponderous" indicates that the book may be burdensome or tiresome due to its size or content, while "folio" denotes a large book format in which sheets of paper are folded once to create two leaves.
they over lap and cause mountains and hills Folded mountains are produced
you don't really get to sit on his lap, but after you visit hi, you will be sent a picture of your webkinz on his lap. But you can't see yourself sitting there in the clubhouse.
An antonym for "folio" could be "compact" or "small."
a folio is a page from a manuscript
"Folio" refers to the size of the book, about 15 inches tall with each page about 11 inches wide. It was made of sheets of 15 x 22 inch paper folded once. A "Quarto" edition started with the same size of paper folded twice, so each page was 11 inches by 7.5 inches, a little narrower than letter size bond. Some of Shakespeare's plays, including Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet, and King Lear, were printed as a single play in Quarto format during Shakespeare's lifetime, sometimes more than once. But after his death, in 1623, two of his business associates and friends, Heminges and Condell, published 36 of his plays in Folio Format, in a book we now call The First Folio. The Quarto and Folio versions of the play are often quite different (especially with Hamlet and King Lear). So, with Hamlet, you will see references to Quarto 1 or Q1, the First or "bad" quarto publication of 1603, Quarto 2, or Q2, the "good" quarto of 1604 or the Folio text of 1623. The Folio text, for example, does not have Hamlet's final soliloquy, "How all occasions do inform against me", but parts that are in the Folio are missing from Q2 as well.
ledger folio charges