From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishfootagefoot‧age /ˈfʊtɪdʒ/ ●○○ noun [uncountable] AMFcinema film showing a particular event old footage from the First World War
Examples from the Corpus
footage• Excellent archive aviation footage contrasts nicely with the film shot of the airfields as they are today.• Classic footage, but a golden opportunity wasted to trace his career from his Olympic gold medal days.• It follows a chronological script, interspersing documentary footage with the acted narrative.• The film also includes some hilarious footage from previous Crazy Horse tours.• What will be a few minutes of footage on the screen took all day to film.• Then footage of police, some in uniform, some not, gathered on the stoop of a row house.• Police are currently studying video footage to identify protesters involved.• What Gast alone came back with was footage of Ali motivating himself while simultaneously enchanting the media and the natives.From Longman Business Dictionaryfootagefoot‧age /ˈfʊtɪdʒ/ noun [uncountable]PROPERTY a length or quantity measured in feetThe company’s new site is double the square footage of the old building.