The front page of a newspaper, magazine, or other publication carries important news and headlines. It can also refer to an article or story that is of major significance, even though it doesn’t make the headlines. The noun front-page is also used in a literary sense to describe the first pages of a book, especially one that contains an introduction and other significant material.
The back-page of a newspaper or magazine contains articles and advertisements that are less prominent or not as newsworthy. It can also be used in a figurative sense to suggest topics or issues that have been sidelined, or not given the attention they deserve in various contexts.
Front-page
In daily conversations, people might reference the back pages of a newspaper or magazines casually when talking about articles or ads that they find interesting but not particularly important. In more formal writing, scholars might refer to the back-pages of a publication when discussing research or supplementary information.
Microsoft FrontPage is a WYSIWYG HTML editor and website administration tool from Microsoft for Windows computers. Originally released as FrontPage 1.0 in 1996, it was later incorporated into the Microsoft Office suite of software and updated to versions 6.0 and 6.5. Prior to version 6.5, the FrontPage Editor and FrontPage Explorer were separate applications, but with 6.5 they were merged into a single application. FrontPage also requires a set of server-side extensions, initially known as FPSE and subsequently renamed Microsoft FrontPage Server Extensions, for web publishing and authoring.