(countable) An English and Scottish surname originating as an occupation for someone who was a servant.
A proper noun "page" represents various locations in the united states, including cities, communities, neighborhoods, townships, villages, and a ghost town.
A suburb of Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia.
Ellipsis of Page County.
An electoral division in New South Wales, Australia
One of the many pieces of paper bound together within a book or similar document.
One side of a paper leaf on which one has written or printed.
(figurative) Any record or writing; a collective memory.
(typography) The type set up for printing a page.
(computing) A screenful of text and possibly other content; especially, the digital simulation of one side of a paper leaf.
(Internet) A web page.
(computing) A block of contiguous memory of a fixed length.
(Britain) A youth employed for doing errands, waiting on the door, and similar service in households.
(US, Canada) A boy or girl employed to wait upon the members of a legislative body.
(in libraries) The common name given to an employee whose main purpose is to replace materials that have either been checked out or otherwise moved, back to their shelves.
A contrivance, as a band, pin, snap, or the like, to hold the skirt of a woman’s dress from the ground.
A track along which pallets carrying newly molded bricks are conveyed to the hack.
Any one of several species of colorful South American moths of the genus Urania.
(transitive) To mark or number the pages of, as a book or manuscript.
(intransitive, often with “through”) To turn several pages of a publication.
(transitive) To furnish with folios.
(transitive) To attend (someone) as a page.
(transitive) To call (somebody) using a public address system to find them.