: a cap or hood usually with bells worn by jesters
2
: a conical cap for slow or lazy students
3
usually foolscap[from the watermark of a foolscap formerly applied to such paper]: a size of paper formerly standard in Great Britain
broadly: a piece of writing paper
Illustration of foolscap
foolscap 1
Did you know?
These days, we are most likely to encounter foolscap as a reference to a sheet of paper or, more specifically, to a sheet of paper that is similar in size to a sheet of legal paper. In the early 17th century, when the use of foolscap was first attested to in English, we would have encountered it as a reference to an actual fool's cap-the cap, often with bells on, worn as part of a jester's motley. How did we get from this colorful cap to a sheet of paper? The connection is attributable to the former use of a watermark depicting a fool's cap that was used on long sheets of writing or printing paper. There are various explanations for the introduction of this watermark-including the claim that a 1648 British parliamentary group substituted it for the royal arms during exceptionally turbulent times-but such explanations remain unsupported by historical facts.
Example Sentences
Recent Examples on the WebThink of Dickens and piles of foolscap and quill pens and Bob Cratchit. John Kass, chicagotribune.com, 4 July 2019