one side of a sheet of paper in a collection of sheets bound together, especially as a book, magazine, or newspaper (尤指书、杂志、报纸的)页 ■the material written or printed on such a sheet of paper 一页(内容) she silently read several pages. 她默默地读了好几页。 ■a sheet of paper of such a kind considered as a whole, comprising both sides 张(包括两面) ■[with modifier]a page of a newspaper or magazine set aside for a particular topic (报纸、杂志的)专页 ■(Computing)a section of stored data, especially that which can be displayed on a screen at one time (计算机)页面 ■a significant episode or period considered as a part of a longer history 历史上值得记载的事件(或时期) a shameful page in British imperial history. 英帝国史上耻辱的一页。
verb
[no obj.](page through)leaf through (a book, magazine, or newspaper) 翻阅 she was paging through an immense pile of Sunday newspapers. 她在翻阅一大堆星期日报纸。 ■(Computing)move through and display (text) one page at a time (计算机)浏览页面 ■[with obj.][usu. as noun paging](Computing)divide (a piece of software or data) into sections, keeping the most frequently accessed in main memory and storing the rest in virtual memory (计算机)(软件、数据的)分页(存储) ■[with obj.]assign numbers to the pages in (a book or periodical); paginate 为…编页码;为…标注页码 ■[as adj., in combination -paged]having pages of a particular kind or number 有…页的 a many-paged volume. 页数很多的一本书。
常用词组 on the same page
(US)(of two or more people) in agreement (美)意见一致
paged adjective 语源
late 16th cent.: from French, from Latin pagina, from pangere 'fasten'
page2 noun
a boy or young man, usually in uniform, employed in a hotel or club to run errands, open doors, etc. (旅馆、俱乐部的)穿制服的小听差;男侍 ■a young boy attending a bride at a wedding 小男傧相 ■(historical)a boy in training for knighthood, ranking next below a squire in the personal service of a knight (史)学习骑士(地位比骑士的侍从低) ■(historical)a man or boy employed as the personal attendant of a person of rank (史)(贵族的)青年侍从;小侍从
verb
[with obj.]summon (an individual) by name, typically over a public address system, so as to pass on a message 喊叫(某人)的名字(尤指广播找人) no need to interrupt the background music just to page the concierge. 没有必要为了播叫看门人而把背景音乐停下。 ■[often as noun paging]contact (someone) by means of a pager 用寻呼机(与某人)联系 many systems have paging as a standard feature. 许多系统把寻呼作为一项必备功能。
语源
Middle English (in the sense 'youth, male of uncouth manners'): from Old French, perhaps from Italian paggio, from Greek paidion, diminutive of pais, paid- 'boy'. Early use of the verb (mid 16th cent.) was in the sense 'follow as or like a page'; its current sense dates from the early 20th cent