0 a page at the front of a book on which you find the name of the book, the writer, and the publisher --
1 a page at the front of a book giving the name of the book and its writer and publisher --
Following the new title page, she had inserted a list of proposed illustrations.
The title page is written in a hand different from that of the rest of the manuscript.
The plays are presented in chronological order with a grey-shaded title page at the start of each for ease of reference.
Would the professor's name continue to appear on the title page, and above the respondent's, and in bolder type?
This is identical in every respect, except that its title page is missing.
The second and third editions, of 1497 and c. 1497, used the same woodcut for the title page as the 1496 edition.
There are fifty-five pages (including the separate title page occupying the opening recto side), all numbered by the library itself.
Presumably, the only fact that the enticingly indeterminate title page made clear to readers was that something peculiar was going on.