(at certain US universities) A compilation of problems and solutions from previous years of a given course, used by some students to cheat on tests or assignments.
“In the book, the author accurately assesses the centrality of Williams's biblicism and argues convincingly that, first and foremost, Williams was a biblicist.”
“Fundamentalism and conservative evangelicalism have a very strong biblicist streak.”
“Br. Marcello is a noted biblicist and did his biblical studies in Jerusalem.”
biblist
One who holds the Bible as the sole rule of faith.
“Well trained in the best American scholarly library, and a true bibliolater, he was equally well equipped to establish Cornell's Library.”
“He was author and publisher, or journalist and editor, the whole of his working life, and a bibliophile, if not a bibliolater, from his earliest to his latest years.”
“While fundamentalists are surely bibliolaters, mainline Protestants by contrast have usurped Scripture's divinity.”
“Like these two bibliolaters at my door, humanity has largely come to understand power as something that cannot be questioned and is the final authority for everyone.”
“Bibliolaters are apparently willing to risk their lives and happiness on the probability that they have made all the correct choices.”