casebook
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From case + book. First use appears c. 1675.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈkeɪsˌbʊk/
Noun
casebook (plural casebooks)
- (US, law) A kind of book, used in law schools, containing the text of court opinions in legal cases accompanied by analysis and related materials.
- A collection of stories or accounts that can individually be described as cases.
Adjective
casebook (comparative more casebook, superlative most casebook)
- (figuratively, uncommon) Having the typical characteristics of some class of phenomenon; a textbook example.
- 1977, Cyra McFadden, The Serial, A Year in the Life of Marin County, page 70:
- Her shrink had told her that her own father, as she'd describe him, was practically a casebook example of an anal retentive.