noun, verb, paged, pag⋅ing.| 1. | one side of a leaf of something printed or written, as a book, manuscript, or letter. |
| 2. | the entire leaf of such a printed or written thing: He tore out one of the pages. |
| 3. | a single sheet of paper for writing. |
| 4. | a noteworthy or distinctive event or period: a reign that formed a gloomy page in English history. |
| 5. | Printing. the type set and arranged for a page. |
| 6. | Computers.
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| 7. | to paginate. |
| 8. | to turn pages (usu. fol. by through): to page through a book looking for a specific passage. |

noun, verb, paged, pag⋅ing.| 1. | a boy servant or attendant. |
| 2. | a youth in attendance on a person of rank or, in medieval times, a youth being trained for knighthood. |
| 3. | an attendant or employee, usually in uniform, who carries messages, ushers guests, runs errands, etc. |
| 4. | a person employed by a legislature to carry messages and run errands for the members, as in the U.S. Congress. |
| 5. | to summon formally by calling out the name of repeatedly: He had his father paged in the hotel lobby. |
| 6. | to summon or alert by electronic pager. |
| 7. | to control (an electrical appliance, machine, etc.) remotely by means of an electronic signal. |
| 8. | to attend as a page. |

PAGE
A typesetting language.
["Computer Composition Using PAGE-1", J.L. Pierson, Wiley 1972].
| PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis |