grāmata

Etymology
Borrowed from (cf. 🇨🇬, itself a borrowing from 🇨🇬. This word was borrowed into  before the 13th century, referring, at first, to written religious manuscripts or texts of religious use, and only later — from the 16th century on (first attestations in dictionaries) — to printed texts. Up until the 1870s,  could also refer to smaller written texts or letters; by the end of the 19th century, it had been restricted to books. Compare obsolete 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1) book a printed and bound publication with more than 48 pages
 * 2) book one of the parts in which a larger work, usually a novel, is divided
 * 3) book, register series of usually blank pages bound or stapled together, in which something important is to be written
 * 4)  ability to read and write
 * 5)  letter, written message
 * 1) book one of the parts in which a larger work, usually a novel, is divided
 * 2) book, register series of usually blank pages bound or stapled together, in which something important is to be written
 * 3)  ability to read and write
 * 4)  letter, written message
 * 1) book one of the parts in which a larger work, usually a novel, is divided
 * 2) book, register series of usually blank pages bound or stapled together, in which something important is to be written
 * 3)  ability to read and write
 * 4)  letter, written message
 * 1) book one of the parts in which a larger work, usually a novel, is divided
 * 2) book, register series of usually blank pages bound or stapled together, in which something important is to be written
 * 3)  ability to read and write
 * 4)  letter, written message
 * 1) book, register series of usually blank pages bound or stapled together, in which something important is to be written
 * 2)  ability to read and write
 * 3)  letter, written message
 * 1)  ability to read and write
 * 2)  letter, written message
 * 1)  ability to read and write
 * 2)  letter, written message
 * 1)  letter, written message
 * 1)  letter, written message