The AI-powered English dictionary
usually uncountable, plural pulps
A soft, moist, shapeless mass or matter.
A mixture of wood, cellulose and/or rags and water ground up to make paper. examples
A mass of chemically processed wood fibres (cellulose). examples
A suspension of mineral particles, typically achieved by some form of agitation. examples
The soft center of a fruit. examples
The soft center of a tooth. examples
The underside of a human fingertip; a finger pad. examples
The very soft tissue in the spleen. examples
A magazine or book containing lurid subject matter and characteristically printed on rough, unfinished paper. quotations examples
The hard-hitting, action packed, thud and blunder adventure fantasy was a commodity during that somber decade: Americans paid money to forget their troubles, and the pulps were willing to sell.
1983, Gary Hoppenstand, Ray Broadus Browne, The Defective Detective in the Pulps, page 2
The fledgling comics business was a sweatshop trade for creative hopefuls too inexperienced, too socially ill-equipped, or, more often, too minimally talented for the established avenues of hackdom, the pulps and commercial art.
2009, David Hajdu, Heroes and Villains: Essays on Music, Movies, Comics, and Culture
third-person singular simple present pulps, present participle pulping, simple past and past participle pulped
(transitive, intransitive) To make or be made into pulp. examples
(transitive, slang) To beat to a pulp.
(transitive) To deprive of pulp; to separate the pulp from. examples
comparative more pulp, superlative most pulp
(fiction) Of or pertaining to pulp magazines; in the style of a pulp magazine or the material printed within such a publication. quotations examples
The Nightwing annual had what felt like a very 'pulp-ish' plot, and the Superman annual was great, with a very pulp plot and a incredible Doc Savage tribute cover.
1997 July 22, Eric Gimlin, “Re: Annual theme '98”, in rec.arts.comics.dc.universe (Usenet), message-ID <33D504B4.105@swbell.net>
Rather than Asimov I might suggest Stanley Weinbaum (since he died young and early in his career, he is far more "pulp" than Asimov - and remarkably readable - there is a LANCER collection of some of his short stories).
2003 January 3, Mark Wheatley, “Re: PULP 2003 READING”, in alt.pulp (Usenet), message-ID <3E159FC7.70409@insightstudiosgroup.com>