
right|thumb|300px|A partial image of a sheet of US Postage stamps, 1940 issue, featuring perforations
right|thumb|300px|A partial image of a sheet of US Postage stamps, 1940 issue, featuring perforations
A perforation is a small hole in a thin material or web. There is usually more than one perforation in an organized fashion, where all of the holes collectively are called a perforation. The process of creating perforations is called perforating, which involves removing bits of the workpiece with a tool. Old-fashioned lick-and-stick postage stamps are perforated. When a tool makes small cuts in the material (without removing anything) it is called 'rouletting', because that tool often resembles a roulette wheel, with blades around the edge. Raffle tickets are a good example of rouletting.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).