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Looking for synonyms for "edit"? Browse alternatives ranked by relevance — sharper word choices for fiction, poetry, and copywriting.
(v)
(usually transitive) To censor, to black out or remove parts of a document while leaving the remainder.
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(transitive) To remove before publication or broadcasting (as an editorial decision).
(chiefly transitive) To incise, to cut into the surface of something.
(n)
A person at a newspaper, publisher or similar institution who edits stories and/or decides which ones to publish.
The whole number of copies of a work printed and published at one time.
The act of publishing printed or other matter.
(transitive) To issue (something, such as printed work) for distribution and/or sale.
The industry of publishing, including the production and distribution of books, magazines, web sites, newspapers, etc.
The process of creating the content of a document or other content item, i.e., writing or composition.
An article in a publication giving the opinion of its editors on a given topic or current event.
(transitive, computing) To destroy (older) data by recording new data over it.
(countable, television and film) A sequence of brief clips, often set to music, used to compress a long event or series of events into a short scene.
The result of modifying something; a new or changed form.
The action or process of reviewing, editing and amending.
An account intended as a critical evaluation of a text or a piece of work.
(transitive) To change part of.
(adj)
changed; altered
(ambitransitive) To change the form or structure of.
(transitive) To improve something (especially a photograph), by adding or correcting details, or by removing flaws.
Change; alteration.
The act of altering or making different.
(transitive) To say or write something with different wording.
(intransitive) To become something different.
(transitive) To modify.
(transitive) To correct and revise (text or a document).
To review, alter and amend, especially of written material.
(transitive) To write again, differently; to modify; to revise.
(especially US) An addition to and/or alteration to the Constitution.
(intransitive) Not to remain constant: to change with time or a similar parameter.
The act or process of verifying.
The act of validating something.
(transitive) To make better; improve.
(transitive) To restore (someone or something) to its proper condition; to straighten out, to set right.
The action or an instance of flowing or coming out, an outflow, particularly:
(transitive) To make shorter; to shorten in duration or extent.
(software) The distribution, either public or private, of an initial or new and upgraded version of a computer software product.
Having been changed from an original form.
Free from error; true; accurate.
Not having been altered from the original version; not edited.
A female given name from Old English.
(music) Ellipsis of chord changes. [(more specifically) A chord progression.]
Having undergone a change.
(N)
an English rock band, formed in 2002 in Birmingham.
editing that involves writing something again
serving to support or corroborate
(E-dee-ta) a Slavic female first name, a form of Edith.
To draft again
(ambitransitive) To improve in accuracy, delicacy, or excellence.
A person who makes, repairs, or alters clothes professionally, especially suits and men's clothing.
Of, from or native to Poland, or relating to the Polish language.
(transitive) To reduce slightly; to cut; especially, to remove excess.
A change in information, a modification of existing or known data.
(transitive and intransitive) To check a written text for errors in spelling, grammar, syntax, and punctuation.
To redo, correct, or rebuild.
(transitive) To act as a curator for.
To thoroughly check or investigate particularly with regard to providing formal approval.
(transitive) To design and construct the contours of a vehicle etc. so as to offer the least resistance to its flow through a fluid.
The process or act of copyediting a document.
(uncountable) The act of altering for the better, or correcting what is erroneous or faulty; correction; improvement.
(uncountable) The process of editing or censoring.
(US) The result of making an amendment to a document etc; an amendment
Something to be corrected.
The act or process of creating a changed wording.
A slight correction or adjustment.
The action of adjusting something
(rhetoric) The amending of a statement just made by further detailing the meaning.
An error, especially one in a printed work.
Something to be added; especially text added as an appendix or supplement to a document.
Something added; especially, such an addition added to make up for a deficiency.
(law) Abbreviation of amendment. [An alteration or change for the better; correction of a fault or of faults; reformation of life by quitting vices.]
The making of a correction.
Abbreviation of editor. [A person who edits or makes changes to documents.]
(law) An addition or supplement that explains, modifies, or revokes a will or part of one.
A spoken or written remark.
A comment added to a text.
severe criticism.
The act or quality of endorsing
Abbreviation of address. [Direction.]
A rewriting, a document copied or written again.
The act of correcting.
The act of retouching something.
A critical revision of a text.
(informal) A review of a topic to be learned.
That which is to be changed.
The process of reviewing or revising a text.
A law or change to an existing law that is added to a governing document.
Adjustment.