Quire is a term not used very much in the 21st century, probably because it has several different meanings. Centuries ago it was the name given to 4 sheets(any size) of paper which were all folded in half to form a 'book' having 8 'leaves'.( A leaf means a double sided piece of paper.) This Quire, of course, had 16 pages to print or write upon. More modern meaning is :- 25 sheets of paper. A pack of modern computer copying paper usually contains 20 Quires (500 sheets) When I was young, you could go to any news agency and buy a students 'exercise book' which had just 1Quire of paper in it. Many decades ago, in some parts of the world, a quire was 24 sheets of paper, but that is now obsolete in most of the world. The words, sheet, & page, & leaf, need to be clearly understood when referring to a quire. Centuries ago, musicians would purchase a quire of paper to use as a manuscript, to write their music on . The 4 sheets which when folded in half, gave them 16 pages to write the music on . I wonder if the the word QUIRE has anything to do with the word CHOIR?
A quire of paper is 25 sheets, and a ream is 500 sheets. A ream is an international standard.
It is 24 or 25 pieces of paper, it can depend. The definition of a quire is 1/20th of a 'ream'. A ream of writing paper is 500 sheets, a ream of 'short' paper is 480 sheets, hence the minor difference.
There are two conflicting units at work here. One is the ream as mentioned in the question and one is the quire. "Short" paper measurements insist that there are 24 sheets in a quire and 20 quires in a ream, therefore, "short" paper measurements give 480 sheets to a ream. Writing paper measurements give 25 sheets to a quire and 20 quires, therefore, 500 sheets, to a ream.
500 sheets of paper is the International Standard for a ream of paper.
The usual number is 500, but occasionally some reams have 480.
I'm pretty sure there are 50 sheets in a quire.
A quire typically has 24 sheets of paper, which equals 48 pages when folded in half. However, historical variations exist where a quire could have a different number of sheets depending on the time period and region.
A bundle typically contains 500 sheets of paper, a ream contains 500 sheets, and a quire contains 24 or 25 sheets depending on the region.
A quire of paper is 25 sheets, and a ream is 500 sheets. A ream is an international standard.
There are twenty four uniform sheets of paper in a quire.
It is 24 or 25 pieces of paper, it can depend. The definition of a quire is 1/20th of a 'ream'. A ream of writing paper is 500 sheets, a ream of 'short' paper is 480 sheets, hence the minor difference.
24 = Sheets of Paper in a QuireA quire is one twentieth of a ream, which can refer to either 480 or 500 sheets of paper, therefore, a quire can equal 24 sheets or 25 sheets, depending on usage.
24 Sheets of Paper in a Quire
The homophone for "choir" is "quire", which means a set of four sheets of paper folded together to make eight leaves.
The homonym for quire is choir. A quire refers to a set of 24 or 25 sheets of paper, while a choir refers to a group of singers who perform together.
25 Sheets Of Paper in a Quire
It is 24 or 25 pieces of paper, it can depend. The definition of a quire is 1/20th of a 'ream'. A ream of writing paper is 500 sheets, a ream of 'short' paper is 480 sheets, hence the minor difference.