repaginate

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repaginate

(riːˈpædʒɪˌneɪt)
vb (tr)
(Printing, Lithography & Bookbinding) to paginate again; renumber the pages of (a book or document)
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(14) However, the passage in question appears on page 221 of the 1974 edition; the page reference given applies to the later, repaginated, edition of 1991.
This seventh edition of an introductory text for nonmajors consists of 30 chapters from the parent text, Biology: Concepts and Applications, repaginated with modified cross-referencing.
Documents are repaginated on the fly and can be output as PDFs, printed to any printer, or imported into another application such as MS Word with formatting intact.
They create an electronic image of documents so that these documents can be repaginated or reprinted without having to be scanned again.
Thus the case secretary once gave an extern a note indicating not only that she had "made a couple of corrections to the caption" of a case but also that the case might have to be repaginated. She also told the extern about chambers procedure: "When you send out mail, please leave a cy on my desk so I can docket it."
Clemence, New Brunswick, NJ, and London: Transaction Publishers (repaginated edition of the original Schumpeter [1928]).
Automated "one of n" simplifies page numbering with repaginated output documents.
(repaginated) as vol.: L'analyse structurale du recit.
It is too bad that the publisher did not share fully Hart's view, for the new edition of this widely cited classic has inexplicably been repaginated, so that the legal theorist's professional tools are now a copy of the first edition, together with a photocopy of the new Postscript.
The repaginated 1969 edition but added to the confusion, for not only were errors of the 1963 edition carried into it wholesale, but the earlier text was cut and pasted for the reprinting, botching the spacing of many passages.