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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
postage stamp
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Finally, from the 40p would be deducted the cost of the telephone call or postage stamp to make the complaint.
▪ Improbable because compared to the plump, leather-lined Bentley, a barn door has the frontal area of a postage stamp.
▪ In its upper right corner, where it belonged, a postage stamp had been etched in the yellow gold.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Postage stamp

Postage \Post"age\, n. The price established by law to be paid for the conveyance of a letter or other mailable matter by a public post.

Postage stamp, a government stamp required to be put upon articles sent by mail in payment of the postage, esp. an adhesive stamp issued and sold for that purpose.

Wiktionary
postage stamp

n. 1 A small piece of printed paper stuck on an item to be mailed, indicating that postage has been paid. 2 (context figuratively colloquial English) A very small area.

WordNet
postage stamp

n. a token that postal fees have been paid [syn: postage, stamp]

Wikipedia
Postage stamp
Postage stamp may also refer to a formatting artifact in the display of film or video: Windowbox.

A postage stamp is a small piece of paper that is purchased and displayed on an item of mail as evidence of payment of postage. Typically, stamps are printed on special custom-made paper, show a national designation and a denomination (value) on the front, and have an adhesive gum on the back or are self-adhesive. Postage stamps are purchased from a postal administration or other authorized vendor, and are used to pay for the costs involved in moving mail, as well as other business necessities such as insurance and registration. They are sometimes a source of net profit to the issuing agency, especially when sold to collectors who will not actually use them for postage.

Stamps are usually rectangular, but triangles or other shapes are occasionally used. The stamp is affixed to an envelope or other postal cover (e.g., packet, box, mailing cylinder) the customer wishes to send. The item is then processed by the postal system, where a postmark, sometimes known as a cancellation mark, is usually applied in overlapping manner to stamp and cover. This procedure marks the stamp as used to prevent its reuse. In modern usage, postmarks generally indicate the date and point of origin of the mailing. The mailed item is then delivered to the address the customer has applied to the envelope or parcel.

Postage stamps have facilitated the delivery of mail since the 1840s. Before then, ink and hand-stamps (hence the word 'stamp'), usually made from wood or cork, were often used to frank the mail and confirm the payment of postage. The first adhesive postage stamp, commonly referred to as the Penny Black, was issued in the United Kingdom in 1840. The invention of the stamp was part of an attempt to reform and improve the postal system in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, which, in the early 19th century, was in disarray and rife with corruption. There are varying accounts of the inventor or inventors of the stamp.

Before the introduction of postage stamps, mail in the UK was paid for by the recipient, a system that was associated with an irresolvable problem: the costs of delivering mail were not recoverable by the postal service when recipients were unable or unwilling to pay for delivered items, and senders had no incentive to restrict the number, size, or weight of items sent, whether or not they would ultimately be paid for. The postage stamp resolved this issue in a simple and elegant manner, with the additional benefit of room for an element of beauty to be introduced. Concurrently with the first stamps, the UK offered wrappers for mail. Later related inventions include postal stationery such as prepaid-postage envelopes, post cards, lettercards, aerogrammes, postage meters, and, more recently, specialty boxes and envelopes provided free to the customer by the U.S. postal service for priority or express mailing.

The postage stamp afforded convenience for both the mailer and postal officials, more effectively recovered costs for the postal service, and ultimately resulted in a better, faster postal system. With the conveniences stamps offered, their use resulted in greatly increased mailings during the 19th and 20th centuries. Postage stamps during this era were the most popular way of paying for mail; however, by the end of the 20th century were rapidly being eclipsed by the use of metered postage and bulk mailing by businesses.

As postage stamps with their engraved imagery began to appear on a widespread basis, historians and collectors began to take notice. The study of postage stamps and their use is referred to as philately. Stamp collecting can be both a hobby and a form of historical study and reference, as government-issued postage stamps and their mailing systems have always been involved with the history of nations.

Postage stamp (disambiguation)

A Postage stamp is evidence of pre-paying a fee for postal services.

Postage stamp may also refer to:

  • Matchboxing or gutterboxing, presenting a standard-aspect-ratio image in the central portion of a letterboxed picture

Usage examples of "postage stamp".

Look at the floor I have your books and your postage stamp which you left in Amaral's room.

I have your books and your postage stamp which you left in Amaral's room.

Oedipa could see, instead of a postage stamp, the handstruck initials PPS.

Look at the floor - I have your books and your postage stamp which you left in Amaral's room.

You could get everything important that is done, said or thought up here written on the back of a postage stamp, and still have room for the Lord's Prayer.

I flattened myself out in the dust like a postage stamp, and thought to myself if he mended his aim ever so little he would probably hear another noise.

The one-dollar black Trans-Mississippi postage stamp which Felix Buckman had laid on her was bought at auction in 1999 by a dealer from Warsaw, Poland.

One sheet is James McNeill Whistler, and the other is a partial postage stamp on the back of a letter the Ripper wrote to Dr.

However, two sheets of paper each have a sequence of numbers that came from a single donor - or only one person: One sheet is James McNeill Whistler, and the other is a partial postage stamp on the back of a letter the Ripper wrote to Dr.

This computer is about the size of a postage stamp and weighs a tenth of an ounce.

Take that tyrant Hussein: Tried to steal the postage stamp next door and got his cheeks waxed.