An book with eared pages. Honestly, it's as simple as that. Other examples include, but are not limited to, dog eared, doggy ears, crooked, bent, ruined, unloved, destroyed, eared.
Call the Midwife - book - has 368 pages.
"Call It Courage" by Armstrong Sperry has about 128 pages in most editions.
pages
Index
It is called Dog-eared.
When you use dog-eared as a noun, it means turning down the corner on a page in a book. It would resemble the ears on a dog that stand up then the upper portion folds down. As a verb - it means - to turn down a corner (eg the page of a book) or to make worn or shabby from overuse
The side of a book is called the spine. It is the edge of the book where all the pages are connected, and the title of the book is often printed on it.
Call an exterminator, found in the phone book or yellow pages.
Thats easy, it's a book!
The phone book (Yellow Pages or White Pages depending on the kind of call) You can also got to the White/Yellow Pages website.
182 pages Not that many pages. It is a great book!
I don't remember where or when I've heard this, but someone has said this refers to the pages of a book where someone has folded down the end edge to save their place. We have all seen books that are "dog-eared" by people who are inconsiderate enough to mar the book's condition by doing this, instead of using a book-mark, or scrap of paper to save their place. I believe they call it "dog-eared" because it resembles the shape of the ears of some breeds of dog. I've seen a beagle with an ear lopped over that way; certain kinds of terriers have that shape ears, too. Maybe someone else can give you more formal information on this.