0 a box or narrow area on a newspaper or magazine page that contains a short news story or extra information relating to a longer main story
1 in a court of law, a private discussion between lawyers and the judge which the jury (= the group of people chosen to decide if someone is guilty) cannot hear, or the area at the front of the court where this discussion takes place :
2 a narrow area on the left or right of a website page giving extra information, often other parts of the website that the user can go to:
3 a narrow area to one side of a newspaper or book page with a short article or other piece of writing in it, usually one that is related to the main information on the page:
Accompanying the article are two sidebars, one showing the letter from the Justice Department.
The process blocks covered by each loop are subset with a side-bar extending out from the condition.
Other charms invoke context-sensitive sidebars that can be used to access app and system functionality.
Pieces are accompanied by photographs, video clips, and sidebars offering suggestions for further viewing, reading, or listening.
The seat is collapsed to align between the sidebars, either down between the front legs, or up to align between back-sidebars.
The festival is also known for its several sidebars, programs running concurrently with the main festival.
Each section or chapter contains the following: story or lesson of faith, foundation and application, sidebars, relationship to culture, discussion questions, doctrinal statements, and meditation and prayer.
Although such a display may often change the relative position of major content units, sidebars may be displaced below body text rather than to the side of it.
Users can optionally display (in the left sidebar of the viewer) thumbnails of pages to assist in page navigation within a document.