The cellulosic material produced by reducing wood mechanically or chemically and used in making paper and cellulose products Also known as wood pulp
A tissue or part resembling pulp; especially, the soft, highly vascular and sensitive tissue which fills the central cavity, called the pulp cavity, of teeth
People refer to stories or novels as pulp fiction when they consider them to be of poor quality and intentionally shocking or sensational. lurid '50s pulp novels
The inner most part of a tooth It contains nerves and blood vessels inside a tooth
the soft inner part of a tooth an inexpensive magazine printed on poor quality paper any soft or soggy mass; "he pounded it to a pulp"
If an object is pressed into a pulp, it is crushed or beaten until it is soft, smooth, and wet. The olives are crushed to a pulp by stone rollers
The wood fibers of trees, ground up for use in the manufacture of paper A common use of those North Country trees which are logged but unsuitable, because of their size or species, for use as sawtimber A compelling reason to recycle paper
The raw material for making paper, produced either chemically or mechanically by removing the cellulose fibers from the stucture of the wood or from other materials, such as used/recyled rages, bagasse, and straw
If money or documents are pulped, they are destroyed. This is done to stop the money being used or to stop the documents being seen by the public. 25 million pounds worth of five pound notes have been pulped because the designers made a mistake
a soft moist part of a fruit a mixture of cellulose fibers reduce to pulp; "pulp fruit"; "pulp wood"