full-page

UK: ˌfʊlˈpeɪdʒ | US: ˌfʊlˈpeɪdʒ

Definition
  1. adj. covering or occupying an entire page

  2. adj. (of an advertisement, image, etc.) designed to span one complete page

Structure
full <complete>page <sheet of paper>
Etymology

The compound "full-page" combines "full" (from Old English full, meaning "complete") and "page" (from Latin pagina, meaning "sheet of paper"). The term emerged in printing and publishing contexts to describe content that occupies an entire page, emphasizing completeness in layout. Its logic reflects straightforward compounding in English, where two standalone words merge to create a specific descriptive term.

Examples
  1. The magazine featured a full-page ad for the new smartphone.

  2. She designed a full-page illustration for the book’s chapter opener.

  3. The newspaper printed a full-page apology for the error.

  4. Full-page spreads are often used for high-impact marketing campaigns.

  5. The report included a full-page graph summarizing the data.