paging

We have found lemma(root) word of paging : page.

Definitions


[peɪdʒ], (Noun)

Definitions:
- one or both sides of a sheet of paper in a book, magazine, newspaper, or other collection of bound sheets
(e.g: a book of not less than 40 pages)


Phrases:
- on the same page

Origin:
late 15th century: from French, from Latin pagina, from pangere ‘fasten’


[peɪdʒ], (Verb)

Definitions:
- look through the pages of (a book, magazine, etc.)
(e.g: she was paging through a pile of Sunday newspapers)

- divide (a piece of software or data) into sections, keeping the most frequently accessed in main memory and storing the rest in virtual memory

- assign numbers to the pages in (a book or periodical); paginate


Phrases:
- on the same page

Origin:
late 15th century: from French, from Latin pagina, from pangere ‘fasten’


[peɪdʒ], (Noun)

Definitions:
- a young person employed in a hotel or other establishment to run errands, open doors, etc.


Phrases:

Origin:
Middle English (in the sense ‘youth, uncouth male’): from Old French, perhaps from Italian paggio, from Greek paidion, diminutive of pais, paid- ‘boy’. Early use of the verb (mid 16th century) was in the sense ‘follow as or like a page’; its current sense dates from the early 20th century


[peɪdʒ], (Verb)

Definitions:
- summon (someone) over a public address system, so as to pass on a message
(e.g: no need to interrupt the background music just to page the concierge)


Phrases:

Origin:
Middle English (in the sense ‘youth, uncouth male’): from Old French, perhaps from Italian paggio, from Greek paidion, diminutive of pais, paid- ‘boy’. Early use of the verb (mid 16th century) was in the sense ‘follow as or like a page’; its current sense dates from the early 20th century




definition by Oxford Dictionaries