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page1 / pāj/ • n. one side of a sheet of paper in a collection of sheets bound together, esp. as a book, magazine, or newspaper. ∎ the material written or printed on such a sheet of paper: she silently read several pages. ∎ a sheet of paper of such a kind considered as a whole, comprising both sides. ∎ a page of a newspaper or magazine set aside for a particular topic: the editorial page. ∎ Printing the type set for the printing of a page. ∎ Comput. a section of stored data, esp. that which can be displayed on a screen at one time. ∎ a significant episode or period considered as a part of a longer history: the inconsistency of this transaction has no parallel on any page of our political history.• v. [intr.] (page through) leaf through (a book, magazine, or newspaper): she was paging through an immense pile of Sunday newspapers. ∎ Comput. move through and display (text) one page at a time. ∎ [usu. as n.] (paging) Comput. divide (a piece of software or data) into sections, keeping the most frequently accessed in main memory and storing the rest in virtual memory. ∎ [tr.] assign numbers to the pages in (a book or periodical); paginate. ∎ [as adj. , in comb.] (-paged) having pages of a particular kind or number: a many-paged volume.PHRASES: on the same page (of two or more people) in agreement.page2 • n. a young person, usually in uniform, employed in a hotel or other establishment to run errands, open doors, etc. ∎ a young boy attending a bride at a wedding. ∎ hist. a boy in training for knighthood, ranking next below a squire in the personal service of a knight. ∎ hist. a man or boy employed as the personal attendant of a person of rank.• v. [tr.] summon (an individual) by name, typically over a public address system, so as to pass on a message: no need to interrupt the background music just to page the concierge. ∎ [often as n.] (paging) contact (someone) by means of a pager: many systems have paging as a standard feature.
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Page Three a British trademark term for a feature which formerly appeared daily on page three of the Sun newspaper and included a picture of a topless young woman.
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Hence vb. XVII. So paginate XIX; back-formation from pagination XIX. — F.