Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
full-page \full-page\ adj. 1. occupying an entire page in a book or paper; as, a full-page ad.
Wiktionary
a. (context journalism of a newspaper or magazine article English) covering an entire page.
WordNet
adj. occupying an entire page in a book or paper; "a full-page ad"
Usage examples of "full-page".
George Ashton was a widower in his mid-fifties who lived with his daughters in a brick-built Queen Anne house of the type you see advertised in a full-page spread in Country Life.
The other day, the Latin Builders Association took out a full-page ad to whine about all the bad press that the construction industry is getting.
Most seemed to be generalists, judging from their full-page ads, which trumpeted crowns, dentures, fillings, periodontal work, bridges, root canals, cosmetic dentistry, and oral surgery.
English adverts of before the war were no doubt less colourful and enterprising than the American ones, but their mental atmosphere was similar, and the sight of a full-page ad on shiny paper gives one the sensation of stepping back into 1939.
The wives of the Allis Chalmers tractor company took out a full-page ad in the farmers' weekly that went all over the state.
Their public policy consists of appeasing their worst enemies, placating their most contemptible attackers, trying to make terms with their own destroyers, pouring money into the support of leftist publications and “liberal” politicians, placing avowed collectivists in charge of their public relations and then voicing—in banquet speeches and full-page ads—socialistic protestations that selfless service to society is their only goal, and altruistic apologies for the fact that they still keep two or three percent of profit out of their multi-million-dollar enterprises.
Starting withDragon , the back book jackets of the hardcovers feature full-page four-color photographs of Clive with one of Pitt's cars.
Starting with Dragon, the back book jackets of the hardcovers feature full-page four-color photographs of Clive with one of Pitt's cars.
A full-page ad ripped out of a slick magazine was affixed to the wall above the bed, between a crooner’.