For a home with some medium-sized bookshelves, it's a must to have
small or large bookmarks. A bookmark is defined as a strip of material
inserted between the pages of a book to mark a place in it. Bookmarks
provide users a way to remember the important data of interest in a
thick book of repeating keywords and similar titles.
For most traditional
people, however, bookmarks are just pieces of rubbish. In my eldest
uncle's opinion, strips of card-box paper or other flaps perform only as
well as those without it, because he easily folded the corner of the
page he liked to remember. Since childhood I could never convince him to
use bookmarks instead. What we did not recognize is that with time, you
may lose these folded corners in natural wear and tear.
When it comes to reading on my own, I use a lot of cut pieces of some
thick papers to slip among the pages to mark the important information
that I hope to use in the future. An occasional problem with me is that I
know the data I'm searching for is in that specific book, but it's hard
for me to find it instantly where and which page number, and sometimes
it's a headache to look for your known data in an unknown manner. So now
whenever I buy a new book, I first put 2 to 3 bookmark pieces attached
at the back of the book.
In digital era, you'll see
bookmarks in your Mozilla or Chrome browsers, to list your favourite
websites and view with ease later again. MS Word or PDF viewers have
also bookmarks to mark your favorite texts or pages, only identifying
them for future reference or retrieval. Still when you install or
uninstall programs your bookmarks can get lost.
Bookmarks are essential tools, and some companies even imprint their
brands in beautiful papers serving also as bookmarks or smaller
postcards. Some bookshops give these bookmark cards as their promotional
gifts on special events. For me, bookmarks are also lifetime memories.
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