- frame: formulate in a particular style or language; "I wouldn't put it that way"; "She cast her request in very polite language"
- someone who puts text into appropriate form for publication
- edit: prepare for publication or presentation by correcting, revising, or adapting; "Edit a book on lexical semantics"; "she edited the letters of the politician so as to omit the most personal passages"
- (redaction) editing: putting something (as a literary work or a legislative bill) into acceptable form
- (Redacted (film)) Redacted is a film written and directed by Brian De Palma that is a fictional drama loosely based on the Mahmudiyah killings in Iraq.Abdul-Ahad, Ghaith. This film is a companion to an earlier film by De Palma: Casualties of War. . The Guardian, 20 October 2006. ...
- (Redaction) In the study of literature, redaction is a form of editing in which multiple source texts are combined (redacted) and subjected to minor alteration to make them into a single work. ...
- To reduce to form, as literary matter; to digest and put in shape (matter for publication); to edit; To censor, used by a government when parts of a document are kept secret and the remainder released; To black out text for other purposes, such as in law, when legally protected sections of text ...
- (redaction) Edited or censored version of a document; The change or changes made while editing; The process of editing or censoring
- (redacted) (adjective) revised or edited, especially by having obscured or removed text
- (redacted) Confidential information that has been removed from a document. In this context, personal information deleted from reports that airlines file regarding the loss, injury or death of pets during transport.
- (Redacting) Redaction is sometimes considered to be a synonymous term for copyediting, but in journal (and other periodical) publishing it specifically means matching a manuscript against house style. ...
- (Redaction) A type of document annotation that provides additional security by concealing from view specific portions of sensitive documents, such as particular words or phrases. ...
- (redaction) Removal of exempted information from copies of a document. [DSS]
- (REDACTION) Legal documents made public by courts often come in a ‘redacted’ form, where key information has been edited out to protect the identity of witnesses. A court must have approved such redactions only after hearing arguments from all parties. ...
- (Redaction) Editing and compiling of texts for popular use and distribution.
- (Redaction) The "blacking out" of the confidential text in a document to be produced. In an Automated Litigation Support program, redaction is usually done by way of an overlay (so the original document image is not actually altered). ...
- (Redaction) The act of withholding information from requesters in accordance with the FOI/PA exemptions
- (Redaction) The editing and ordering of written materials by someone other than the writer.
- (Redaction) The process of revising a work so as to weave in themes and ideas that invest the finished product with themes and emphases the redactor wishes to emphasize.
- (Redaction) The process or the result of modifying, shaping or editing a text. This web page has experienced a number of redactions; the original text has been altered and expanded, some items have been reworded or deleted. ...
- (Redaction) the reduction of a body of text usually for editorial or societal reasons or through loss of subject data.
- Redaction is done when a public record contains sensitive, private, or confidential information that is taken out of the document, or redacted, in a way that does not distort the meaning of the record. The practice of striking or otherwise taking out this type of material is called redaction.
- (Redactions) additions by the redactor to harmonise the sources together; many of the uncertain passages may be part of this editing.
- The process of blacking-out personal identifiers is known as redaction. Guidelines for redacting or blacking-out Personal Identifiers are as follows:
- To white‐out or black‐out certain words, sentences, paragraphs, or other information on a public record.