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The Collaborative International Dictionary
manila paper

manila paper \manila paper\ n. A durable brown or buff paper or thin cardboard with a smooth light brown finish, made of Manila hemp, and used as a wrapping paper, or as a cheap printing and writing paper. The name is also given to inferior papers, made of other fiber.

Syn: manila, manila paper, manilla, manilla paper.

WordNet
manila paper

n. a strong paper or thin cardboard with a smooth light brown finish made from e.g. Manila hemp [syn: manila, manilla, manilla paper]

Wikipedia
Manila paper

Manila paper is a relatively inexpensive type of paper, generally made through a less refined process than other types of paper. It is typically made from semi-bleached wood fibres. It is not as strong as kraft paper but has better printing qualities. Manila is buff-coloured and the fibres are usually visible to the naked eye. Because this paper is generally inexpensive, it is commonly given to children for making art.

Manila paper was originally made out of old Manila Hemp ropes which were extensively used on ships, having replaced true hemp. It was made from Manila hemp (also called abacá) or Musa textilis which is grown in the Philippines and hence the association with Manila, the capital of that country. Abaca is an exceptionally strong fibre, nowadays used for special papers like teabag tissue. It is also very expensive, priced several times higher than woodpulp, hence the change to that fibre for what is still called Manilla - usually with two "ll"s. More recently new woodpulp has often been replaced with a high proportion of recycled fibre. True manila hemp folders would have been much tougher and long lasting than modern folders.

Manila is most commonly used for making file folders. Some fashion schools and people in the fashion industry use large rolls of Manila to create finalised clothing patterns.

In East Africa, “Manila paper” refers to card stock paper.

Usage examples of "manila paper".

Meanwhile, Kennedy, without further ceremony, began carefully to remove the wrapper of brown Manila paper, preserving everything as he did so.

Once she got the trunk open, she yanked the manila paper from the shotgun.

Currency, tight-packed little bricks of it, taped in strips of manila paper with the amounts of denominations serialized on them, the way banks do.

A fragment of waxed manila paper-what the military dynamite had been wrapped in.