Recto.
Recto Recto= Right Hand Page; Verso=Left Hand Page
On the back. The front side of a page is recto and the back is verso.
This is a term from the craft/process of printing. Recto is a page that is on the right of an open book, and verso is on the reverse side of recto; verso pages are on the left.
Right hand page is called Recto. The left hand page is Verso
verso
Verso is the left-hand page of an open book or the back side of a single leaf. It is the opposite of recto, which is the right-hand page of an open book or the front of a single leaf.
verso
It is called the verso. The right side page is called the recto.
The two sides of a page are commonly referred to as the "recto" and "verso." The recto is the front side, typically the right-hand page in a book, while the verso is the back side, usually the left-hand page. These terms are often used in publishing, printing, and bibliographic contexts.
A page is a page you can read. A leaf is a sheet of paper with two pages able to be printed on it. A title page is the important first page with the name of the book and author. The back side of the leaf is the "verso". The back side of the title page is the verso of the title page, or if you want to be really picky you can say the verso of the title leaf.
The right-hand page of a book is called the recto.
It's neither. It's just called the legals page.