Not cut; not separated or divided by cutting or otherwise; -- said especially of books, periodicals, and the like, when the leaves have not been separated by trimming in binding.
Not shortened; not condensed; unabridged; -- said of books, plays, and movies; as, an uncut edition of the film.
Rough edges of a text block that have not been cut or trimmed by binder
The pages of the completed book are untrimmed, rough and often uneven.
Text block not trimmed by the binder.
Page edges that have not been trimmed to a uniform, smooth edge by the binder. Also called a deckle edge. Uncut leaves shouldn't be confused with unopened ones. A book is said to be unopened if the original paper folds have been left intact and therefore the leaves aren't separated.
The edges of the pages are not uniform or smooth, as in ‘top and side edge uncut'. Does not mean the paper sheets were not cut at all, but that they were bound without being retrimmed to neat edges. Compare with deckle edge and unopened (following).
A book in which the edges of leaves have not been cut.
refers to the edges of a book in an untrimmed state, edges are uneven. (See also, Deckle edges)
not trimmed; "shaggy untrimmed locks"
not shaped by cutting or trimming; "an uncut diamond"; "rough gemstones"
(of pages of a book) having adjacent leaves still joined at the fore edge; "a book with its leaves still uncut"
A text block that has not been trimmed during the binding or re-binding process.
A term that describes the edges of a book in their untrimmed state. An uncut book has edges that are uneven to some degree. See also DECKLE EDGES UNOPENED
Edges that are rough-cut, rather than being neatly trimmed by the binders.
the leaf edges have not been trimmed smooth.
The pages of the completed book have not been shaved down to a uniform surface.
Uncut magazine, trademarked as UNCUT is a popular monthly publication based in London. It is available across the English-speaking world, and focuses on films, music and books. A DVD magazine under the Uncut brand was published quarterly from 2005 to 2006.