词汇 | paging |
释义 | (redirected from paging)take a page from (someone's) bookTo do something in the way someone else would do it; to behave or act like someone else. I think I'm going to take a page from your book and start going for a run first thing in the morning. Our youngest son was always very placid as a baby, but now that he's getting older, he's begun taking a page from our older boy's book. take a page out of (someone's) bookTo do something in the way someone else would do it; to behave or act like someone else. I think I'm going to take a page out of your book and start going for a run first thing in the morning. Our youngest son was always very placid as a baby, but now that he's getting older, he's begun taking a page out of our older boy's book. turn the pageTo make a transition to something else, especially a more positive period after a negative one; to move on. After a stressful and chaotic tenure at that firm, I'm excited to turn the page and start in this new position. I think we can turn the page on this discussion, Joe. There's nothing left we need to linger over. on the same pageOf two or more people, thinking in the same manner; having the same general outlook or position. We all need to be on the same page before we try to present this complex idea to the boss. be on the same pageTo share the same general outlook or specific opinion as well as the same knowledge about something, especially an approach or strategy; to be in agreement or harmony about something. We all need to be on the same page before we try to present this complex idea to the boss. page three girlA woman who poses in little or no clothing for photographs featured in magazines or tabloid newspapers. Named for the particular page on which such a feature appeared in The Sun, a British tabloid. The former page three girl is now active in charities supporting girls and young women with eating disorders and body image issues. the printed wordAnything that is written on a physical piece of paper; printed media in general, especially books. It's important to foster a love of the printed word in children at an early age. The sudden and ubiquitous rise of e-books and smart devices led many to worry that the printed word may vanish altogether. the printed pageA physical piece of paper on which something is written or printed. With the rise of smartphones, which require malleable, homogenous formats, crafting a piece of writing to be visually striking or appealing on the printed page has become something of a lost art. page through (something)To casually flip through the pages of some written work. I paged through a few fashion magazines while waiting at the doctor's office. He just paged through my script before throwing it back on the desk and telling me he wasn't interested. read from the same pageTo have the same understanding, thought process, or amount of knowledge (about something) as someone else. We all need to be reading from the same page before we try to present this idea to the boss. I think it would help if both parents attended the presentation. That way, you'll both be reading from the same page when it comes time to implement what we talk about. (I'll) see you in the funny pagesold-fashioned A friendly, jocular expression of farewell to someone. The "funny pages" refers to the section of a newspaper in which comic strips are collected. I'd better be going now. I'll see you in the funny pages! My grandmother always used to say "see you in the funny pages" whenever we left her house. read from the same pageand sing from the same hymnbookCliché share the same understanding of something. Okay, I think we are reading from the same page now. We can discuss the future of this project more productively. take a leaf out of someone's bookand take a page from someone's bookFig. to behave or to do something in a way that someone else would. When you act like that, you're taking a leaf out of your sister's book, and I don't like it! You had better do it your way. Don't take a leaf out of my book. I don't do it well. on the same pageIf two or more people are on the same page, they are in agreement about what they are trying to achieve. It makes life easier in our department when we know we're all on the same page. The party has done so much to get members of its organisation on-message and on the same page. turn the pageIf someone or something turns the page, they make a fresh start after a period of difficulties and troubles. Shareholders at the company's annual meeting will be looking for signs that the troubled company really does mean to turn the page. We can play much better, but today I believe we turned the page. Compare with turn over a new leaf. on the same page(of two or more people) in agreement. USpage three girla model whose nude or semi-nude photograph appears as part of a regular series in a tabloid newspaper.This sort of photograph is featured on page three of the British tabloid newspaper The Sun. be on the same ˈpage(especially American English) think the same way or have the same opinion about something: I just want to make sure we’re all on the same page about this.the printed ˈword/ˈpagestories, articles, etc. printed in a book, magazine, newspaper, etc.page throughv. To go through some reading material quickly or superficially, turning from page to page, as in searching or browsing: I paged through the magazine to see if there were any interesting articles in it. You'll find some interesting things on that website if you page through it for a while. on the same page mod. have the same understanding or amount of knowledge. (As if people were reading from the same page.) We’re not on the same page. Listen carefully to what I am telling you. See you in the funny pagesand SYITFP sent. & comp. abb. I will see you around. (see also See you in church.) Bye, Tom. SYITFP. take a page from someone’s book tv. to copy or emulate. I took a page from Edison’s book and began inventing useful little things. on the same page, to beTo be in complete agreement. This term, from the second half of the 1900s, alludes to reading from the same page of a book. It has largely replaced the earlier on the same wavelength, which alluded to the radio waves of a broadcast and dates from the first half of the 1900s. The newer version appears in David Baldacci’s Hour Game (2004), “We need to coordinate and keep each other informed. We all need to be on the same page.” |
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