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单词 redaction
释义

Definition of redaction in English:

redaction

noun rɪˈdakʃ(ə)nrəˈdækʃ(ə)n
mass noun
  • 1The process of editing text for publication.

    (为出版而进行的)编辑,修改(文本)

    what was left after the redaction would be virtually useless
    Example sentencesExamples
    • I said I felt strongly that this was a matter of liaison sensitivity that justified redaction (editing).
    • Critics like Ehrman have been able to detect such things precisely because original readings have been preserved, or at least there have been ways to detect redaction that are fairly reliable.
    • We are of the view that redaction is not sufficient to preserve the identity of the writer, which may be revealed by or easily ascertainable from the content of the report.
    • A work that had been subjected to any kind of redaction would surely show more signs of narrative coherence.
    • Still others bracket out the questions of authorship, dating, and redaction in favor of simply reading the book as a final literary product.
    • But you know, more often than not, they err on the side of redaction rather than disclosure.
    • The relative clause was seen as secondary, rather than the entire point of the remark, and thus was subject to redaction.
    • A key point here is that those responsible for the final redaction of our text seem to have had a minimalist approach to editing.
    • In the rush to the vernacular, the redaction deprived people of the texts in both Latin and English.
    • Third, I would argue once more that redaction and narrative criticisms are the friend rather than the foe of historical verification.
    • She argues that the ‘case-by-case’ approach to privilege outlined in Ryan should be applied, and, if properly applied, would result in redaction of the portion of the records in issue.
    • The redaction of the text ensures this fatal tidiness.
    • Butön was involved with the redaction and classification of the two parts of the Tibetan Buddhist canon, the Kanjur and the Tenjur.
    • His comments focus mainly on the sources of Matthew's material and his redaction of those sources.
    • I am making a simple distinction between the redaction of my written notes for verbalization and a quantity of ad-libbed additions direct to tape.
    • The Microsoft Office Word 2003 Redaction Add-in makes it easy for you to mark sections of a document for redaction.
    • The redaction and production of privileged documents, or the adducing of further evidence, will lead to additional delay and increased costs.
    • Goldstein brings together the fruit of extensive research and massive erudition in multiple disciplines, wielding the tools of source, genre, redaction, and textual criticism with masterful force.
    • The disparity between theory and praxis is particularly glaring in the redaction of canonical works.
    Synonyms
    correction, rectification
    1. 1.1 The censoring or obscuring of part of a text for legal or security purposes.
      (出于法律或安全目的所作的) 文本审查;文本模糊化处理
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The brief is riddled with the black boxes lawyers call redactions.
      • Thousands of pages are marked by redactions, blacked out information like the names of people who attended meetings.
      • But there is a wide feeling among many others that these redactions were really just ways to avoid embarrassment.
      • The Sunday Telegraph, which has access to the files without redactions, can provide the full picture.
      • The document has a fairly high level of redaction, including - unbelievably - almost half of its bibliography.
      • The consultation meant that all MPs were aware of the redactions that would be made to their documents.
      • If there are redactions, the redactions must be accompanied by a supporting explanation.
      • Here is what it said, with a few redactions for discretion's sake.
      • I think it was irresponsible of you to post the document without additional redactions.
      • Unfortunately, they implemented the redactions by the completely pointless method of placing black rectangles over the sensitive text in the PDF.
      • The High Court rejected the appeal and MPs were tasked with getting the details of their expenses ready for publication, but with certain redactions.
      • Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich) forced the Justice Department to release some previously redacted material from the Defense Department, showing that the redactions had hidden FBI criticisms of the interrogation methods.
      • Clarke's testimony, with only slight redactions for security reasons, can be accessed here.
      • He said the redactions appeared designed to "protect senior officials."
      • Some MPs say he warned them they could face legal action if they published their own receipts without redactions.
      • The Commissioner requires that the House of Commons shall provide the complainant with the requested information with the following redactions made.
      • Were you surprised at the extent of the redactions?
      • This year, MPs were given copies of their files, already marked with the Commons authorities changes, to suggest their own redactions.
      • Speaking anonymously to other newspapers, some senior MPs have suggested that some of the redactions were made on the advice of MI5.
      • The redactions are made at the request of the parties, to protect what is said to be confidential information relating to their respective software systems.
    2. 1.2count noun A version of a text, such as a new edition or an abridged version.
      新版本,修订本
      the author himself never chose to establish a definitive redaction
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It seems to me, however, that this chapter and the one preceding it most likely did not belong to the first redaction of the work.
      • There's a good redaction of their argument in a recent issue of Reason.
      • But much depends on very uncertain datings of alleged redactions and, at times, questionable exegesis.
      • What must be acknowledged is precisely the lack of a Christian redaction of the Old Testament.
      • The editors' ability to present a lucid redaction of the main points of Amar Singh's voluminous diaries is to their credit.
      • Most obviously, an early redaction of material already assembled in the Prophet's lifetime would inspire considerable confidence in our text of the Koran.
      • The redactions are made at the request of the parties, to protect what is said to be confidential information relating to their respective software systems.
      • Established by the monk Tao-hsüan, this school began by establishing which of the several redactions of the monastic regulations that had been translated into Chinese would become the standard.
      • Thus an Elizabethan ‘Homer’ could well mean an English translation of an Italian redaction, or of a French or Latin version of the Greek original.
      • The people in the intelligence community say that there's so many methods and sources that they have to protect, that these redactions, as they call them, were necessary.
      • Many of the redactions had no intelligence rationale; they were simply meant to eliminate as much embarrassment for the agency as possible.
      • Rather, it is a final redaction of sources ranging from the Red Book of Westmarch, to Elvish Chronicles, to Gondorian records, to tales of Rohirrim which were only transcribed centuries later.
      • In place of reading the important late colonial chronicle of Michoacan by Pablo Beaumont, he relies on redactions of it by the prominent historian Benedict Warren.
      • Both redactions of the original play make Act I, Scene 2 of vital importance in the development of the relations of power between Caliban, Prospero, and Miranda.
      • He assembles a vast amount of historical and literary material on the source and various redactions of the tales.
      • They include a redaction of Freeman's journal, some excerpts of the original, and four manuscript reports sent in by Custis.
      • Later redactions of saints' lives tended to omit historical details that were no longer easily understood and to embellish the text with more outlandish miracle stories.
      Synonyms
      issue, number, volume

Derivatives

  • redactional

  • adjective
    • Rather, he claims that the text is ‘not a seamless whole, but… the product of much redactional activity’.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Because of the focus on the text as it stands, discussion of redactional and compositional issues is minimal.
      • This translation is intended to remove redactional errors found in other translations.
      • Two other difficulties should be briefly mentioned in regard to the final redactional unit.
      • Similarly, appeals to either form critical or redactional studies have not won a consensus.

Origin

Late 18th century: from French rédaction, from late Latin redactio(n-), from redigere 'bring back'.

Rhymes

abstraction, action, attraction, benefaction, compaction, contraction, counteraction, diffraction, enaction, exaction, extraction, faction, fraction, interaction, liquefaction, malefaction, petrifaction, proaction, protraction, putrefaction, retroaction, satisfaction, stupefaction, subtraction, traction, transaction, tumefaction, vitrifaction

Definition of redaction in US English:

redaction

nounrəˈdækʃ(ə)nrəˈdakSH(ə)n
  • 1The process of editing text for publication.

    (为出版而进行的)编辑,修改(文本)

    what was left after the redaction would be virtually useless
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The redaction of the text ensures this fatal tidiness.
    • She argues that the ‘case-by-case’ approach to privilege outlined in Ryan should be applied, and, if properly applied, would result in redaction of the portion of the records in issue.
    • The relative clause was seen as secondary, rather than the entire point of the remark, and thus was subject to redaction.
    • I said I felt strongly that this was a matter of liaison sensitivity that justified redaction (editing).
    • Third, I would argue once more that redaction and narrative criticisms are the friend rather than the foe of historical verification.
    • Still others bracket out the questions of authorship, dating, and redaction in favor of simply reading the book as a final literary product.
    • The redaction and production of privileged documents, or the adducing of further evidence, will lead to additional delay and increased costs.
    • In the rush to the vernacular, the redaction deprived people of the texts in both Latin and English.
    • Critics like Ehrman have been able to detect such things precisely because original readings have been preserved, or at least there have been ways to detect redaction that are fairly reliable.
    • A work that had been subjected to any kind of redaction would surely show more signs of narrative coherence.
    • The disparity between theory and praxis is particularly glaring in the redaction of canonical works.
    • But you know, more often than not, they err on the side of redaction rather than disclosure.
    • The Microsoft Office Word 2003 Redaction Add-in makes it easy for you to mark sections of a document for redaction.
    • His comments focus mainly on the sources of Matthew's material and his redaction of those sources.
    • We are of the view that redaction is not sufficient to preserve the identity of the writer, which may be revealed by or easily ascertainable from the content of the report.
    • Butön was involved with the redaction and classification of the two parts of the Tibetan Buddhist canon, the Kanjur and the Tenjur.
    • A key point here is that those responsible for the final redaction of our text seem to have had a minimalist approach to editing.
    • I am making a simple distinction between the redaction of my written notes for verbalization and a quantity of ad-libbed additions direct to tape.
    • Goldstein brings together the fruit of extensive research and massive erudition in multiple disciplines, wielding the tools of source, genre, redaction, and textual criticism with masterful force.
    Synonyms
    correction, rectification
    1. 1.1 The censoring or obscuring of part of a text for legal or security purposes.
      (出于法律或安全目的所作的) 文本审查;文本模糊化处理
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The redactions are made at the request of the parties, to protect what is said to be confidential information relating to their respective software systems.
      • Thousands of pages are marked by redactions, blacked out information like the names of people who attended meetings.
      • The brief is riddled with the black boxes lawyers call redactions.
      • Clarke's testimony, with only slight redactions for security reasons, can be accessed here.
      • The document has a fairly high level of redaction, including - unbelievably - almost half of its bibliography.
      • Were you surprised at the extent of the redactions?
      • Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich) forced the Justice Department to release some previously redacted material from the Defense Department, showing that the redactions had hidden FBI criticisms of the interrogation methods.
      • If there are redactions, the redactions must be accompanied by a supporting explanation.
      • Unfortunately, they implemented the redactions by the completely pointless method of placing black rectangles over the sensitive text in the PDF.
      • This year, MPs were given copies of their files, already marked with the Commons authorities changes, to suggest their own redactions.
      • The Commissioner requires that the House of Commons shall provide the complainant with the requested information with the following redactions made.
      • I think it was irresponsible of you to post the document without additional redactions.
      • But there is a wide feeling among many others that these redactions were really just ways to avoid embarrassment.
      • Speaking anonymously to other newspapers, some senior MPs have suggested that some of the redactions were made on the advice of MI5.
      • Some MPs say he warned them they could face legal action if they published their own receipts without redactions.
      • The Sunday Telegraph, which has access to the files without redactions, can provide the full picture.
      • He said the redactions appeared designed to "protect senior officials."
      • Here is what it said, with a few redactions for discretion's sake.
      • The consultation meant that all MPs were aware of the redactions that would be made to their documents.
      • The High Court rejected the appeal and MPs were tasked with getting the details of their expenses ready for publication, but with certain redactions.
    2. 1.2 A version of a text, such as a new edition or an abridged version.
      新版本,修订本
      the author himself never chose to establish a definitive redaction
      Example sentencesExamples
      • They include a redaction of Freeman's journal, some excerpts of the original, and four manuscript reports sent in by Custis.
      • Most obviously, an early redaction of material already assembled in the Prophet's lifetime would inspire considerable confidence in our text of the Koran.
      • Thus an Elizabethan ‘Homer’ could well mean an English translation of an Italian redaction, or of a French or Latin version of the Greek original.
      • Rather, it is a final redaction of sources ranging from the Red Book of Westmarch, to Elvish Chronicles, to Gondorian records, to tales of Rohirrim which were only transcribed centuries later.
      • It seems to me, however, that this chapter and the one preceding it most likely did not belong to the first redaction of the work.
      • He assembles a vast amount of historical and literary material on the source and various redactions of the tales.
      • Both redactions of the original play make Act I, Scene 2 of vital importance in the development of the relations of power between Caliban, Prospero, and Miranda.
      • Many of the redactions had no intelligence rationale; they were simply meant to eliminate as much embarrassment for the agency as possible.
      • Later redactions of saints' lives tended to omit historical details that were no longer easily understood and to embellish the text with more outlandish miracle stories.
      • The redactions are made at the request of the parties, to protect what is said to be confidential information relating to their respective software systems.
      • The people in the intelligence community say that there's so many methods and sources that they have to protect, that these redactions, as they call them, were necessary.
      • What must be acknowledged is precisely the lack of a Christian redaction of the Old Testament.
      • There's a good redaction of their argument in a recent issue of Reason.
      • In place of reading the important late colonial chronicle of Michoacan by Pablo Beaumont, he relies on redactions of it by the prominent historian Benedict Warren.
      • But much depends on very uncertain datings of alleged redactions and, at times, questionable exegesis.
      • Established by the monk Tao-hsüan, this school began by establishing which of the several redactions of the monastic regulations that had been translated into Chinese would become the standard.
      • The editors' ability to present a lucid redaction of the main points of Amar Singh's voluminous diaries is to their credit.
      Synonyms
      issue, number, volume

Origin

Late 18th century: from French rédaction, from late Latin redactio(n-), from redigere ‘bring back’.

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更新时间:2024/12/27 6:59:36