Sir Earle (Christmas Grafton). 1880–1961, Australian statesman; co-leader, with S. M. Bruce, of the federal government of Australia (1923–29) Sir Frederick Handley. 1885–1962, English pioneer in the design and manufacture of aircraft
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
page1 /peɪdʒ/USA pronunciation
n., v., paged, pag•ing.
n. [countable]
v.
page2 /peɪdʒ/USA pronunciation n., v., paged, pag•ing.
n. [countable]
v. [~ + object]
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2025n. [countable]
- Printingone side, or both sides, of a sheet of something printed or written, as a book or letter:How many pages are there in this book?
- an important event or period:a bright page in English history.
- Computing
- Computinga block of computer memory up to 4,096 bytes long.
v.
- page through, [~ + through + object] to turn pages of (a book).
page2 /peɪdʒ/USA pronunciation n., v., paged, pag•ing.
n. [countable]
- a boy servant or attendant.
- Governmentan employee who carries messages, etc., as in a legislature.
v. [~ + object]
- to summon (a person) by calling out his or her name, as over a public-address system:He must be somewhere at the airport; let's see if we can page him.
- to summon or alert by electronic pager:The doctor was paged repeatedly.
page1
(pāj),USA pronunciation n., v., paged, pag•ing.
n.
v.t.
page2 (pāj),USA pronunciation n., v., paged, pag•ing.
n.
v.t.
Page (pāj),USA pronunciation n.
page, +n.
n.
- Printingone side of a leaf of something printed or written, as a book, manuscript, or letter.
- Printingthe entire leaf of such a printed or written thing:He tore out one of the pages.
- Printinga single sheet of paper for writing.
- a noteworthy or distinctive event or period: a reign that formed a gloomy page in English history.
- PrintingPrint. the type set and arranged for a page.
- Computing
- Computinga relatively small block of main or secondary storage, up to about 1024 words.
- a block of program instructions or data stored in main or secondary storage.
- (in word processing) a portion of a document.
- ComputingSee Web page.
v.t.
- Printingto paginate.
- to turn pages (usu. fol. by through):to page through a book looking for a specific passage.
- Latin pāgina column of writing, akin to pangere to fix, make fast
- Middle French
- 1580–90
page2 (pāj),USA pronunciation n., v., paged, pag•ing.
n.
- a boy servant or attendant.
- Governmenta youth in attendance on a person of rank or, in medieval times, a youth being trained for knighthood.
- Governmentan attendant or employee, usually in uniform, who carries messages, ushers guests, runs errands, etc.
- Governmenta person employed by a legislature to carry messages and run errands for the members, as in the U.S. Congress.
v.t.
- to summon formally by calling out the name of repeatedly:He had his father paged in the hotel lobby.
- to summon or alert by electronic pager.
- Electricityto control (an electrical appliance, machine, etc.) remotely by means of an electronic signal.
- to attend as a page.
- ?
- Old French
- Middle English (noun, nominal) 1250–1300
Page (pāj),USA pronunciation n.
- Biographical Thomas Nelson, 1853–1922, U.S. novelist and diplomat.
- Biographical Walter Hines, 1855–1918, U.S. journalist, editor, and diplomat.
page, +n.
- ComputingSee Web page (in this section).
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
one side of one of the leaves of a book, newspaper, letter, etc, or the written or printed matter it bears such a leaf considered as a unit a screenful of information from a website, teletext service, etc, displayed on a television monitor or visual display unit an episode, phase, or period: a glorious page in the revolution - on the same page ⇒
working in harmony
- another word for paginate
a boy employed to run errands, carry messages, etc, for the guests in a hotel, club, etc a youth in attendance at official functions or ceremonies, esp weddings a boy in training for knighthood in personal attendance on a knight a youth in the personal service of a person of rank, esp in a royal household
to call out the name of (a person), esp by a loudspeaker system, so as to give him or her a message to call (a person) by an electronic device, such as a pager to act as a page to or attend as a page
'Page' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):
Bruce
- CIP
- Handley Page
- Led Zeppelin
- accelerated reader
- added title page
- adjacent
- adverse
- applet
- axolotl
- banner
- banner ad
- bellboy
- below
- bleed
- book review
- border
- bottom
- box
- boxhead
- boy
- break
- bring forward
- buttons
- caption
- card
- carry
- carry forward
- carry-over
- cast
- catchword
- centered
- clean
- coistrel
- collate
- column
- content
- dedicate
- dog-ear
- domain name
- donzel
- dot
- dummy
- ear
- edge
- editorial
- embed
- end paper
- errata
- erratum