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Definition of Paging
1. Noun. Calling out the name of a person (especially by a loudspeaker system). "The public address system in the hospital was used for paging"
2. Noun. The system of numbering pages.
Group relationships: Page
Generic synonyms: Number
Derivative terms: Paginate, Page
Definition of Paging
1. n. The marking or numbering of the pages of a book.
Definition of Paging
1. Noun. (computing) A transfer of pages between main memory and an auxiliary store, such as hard disk drive. ¹
2. Verb. (present participle of page) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Paging
1. a transfer of computer pages [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Paging
Literary usage of Paging
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Index of Economic Material in the Documents of the States of the United by Adelaide Rosalia Hasse, Carnegie Institution of Washington. Dept. of Economics and Sociology (1912)
"paging from Collected doce. 1861-1865. Summary of expenditures In qm gen. ...
paging from Collected Лося. . " Further reflection has served to strengthen ..."
2. Annual Report by Michigan Board of State Auditors (1898)
"211 quires, $14.40; paging same, GOc; repairing 1 unpaid taxes. Bay. ... $3;
paging same, ijc: repairing 1 large book of letters No. ..."
3. Publishers Weekly by Publishers' Board of Trade (U.S.), Book Trade Association of Philadelphia, American Book Trade Union, Am. Book Trade Association, R.R. Bowker Company (1921)
"An antique tobacco-pouch of the Iroquois. various paging pis. ... An image and
an amulet of nephrite from Costa Rica, various paging pis. ..."
4. Cataloging Rules: With Explanations and Illustrations by Jennie Dorcas Fellows, Dorcas Fellows, New York State Library School (1922)
"(frequent in French books) there is strong evidence that if the pages had been
numbered they would have continued the previous paging, add to the ..."
5. A Bibliographical and Critical Account of the Rarest Books in the English by J(ohn) Payne Collier (1866)
"The paging and the signatures run on from one part to the other; and, although
this is the first edition known, it is very possible that it was printed at a ..."