Online Google Dictionary

redact 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/riˈdakt/,
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redacting, present participle; redacts, 3rd person singular present; redacted, past tense; redacted, past participle;
  1. Edit (text) for publication

  2. Censor or obscure (part of a text) for legal or security purposes


  1. frame: formulate in a particular style or language; "I wouldn't put it that way"; "She cast her request in very polite language"
  2. someone who puts text into appropriate form for publication
  3. 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"
  4. (redaction) editing: putting something (as a literary work or a legislative bill) into acceptable form
  5. (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. ...
  6. (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. ...
  7. 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 ...
  8. (redaction) Edited or censored version of a document; The change or changes made while editing; The process of editing or censoring
  9. (redacted) (adjective)  revised or edited, especially by having  obscured or removed text
  10. (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.
  11. (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. ...
  12. (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. ...
  13. (redaction) Removal of exempted information from copies of a document. [DSS]
  14. (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. ...
  15. (Redaction) Editing and compiling of texts for popular use and distribution.
  16. (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). ...
  17. (Redaction) The act of withholding information from requesters in accordance with the FOI/PA exemptions
  18. (Redaction) The editing and ordering of written materials by someone other than the writer.
  19. (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.
  20. (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. ...
  21. (Redaction) the reduction of a body of text usually for editorial or societal reasons or through loss of subject data.
  22. 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.
  23. (Redactions) additions by the redactor to harmonise the sources together; many of the uncertain passages may be part of this editing.
  24. The process of blacking-out personal identifiers is known as redaction.  Guidelines for redacting or blacking-out Personal Identifiers are as follows:
  25. To white‐out or black‐out certain words, sentences, paragraphs, or other information on a public record.