Online Google Dictionary

stet 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/stet/,
Font size:

stetting, present participle; stets, 3rd person singular present; stetted, past participle; stetted, past tense;
  1. Let it stand (used as an instruction on a printed proof to indicate that a correction or alteration should be ignored)

  2. Write such an instruction against (something corrected or deleted)

Noun
  1. Such an instruction made on a printed proof


  1. printing: cancel, as of a correction or deletion
  2. printing: direct that a matter marked for omission or correction is to be retained (used in the imperative)
  3. Stet is a Latin word (meaning "let it stand") used by proofreaders and editors to instruct the typesetter or writer to disregard a change the editor or proofreader had previously marked. Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1). Random House, Inc. 01 Oct. 2007.
  4. STET is a science fiction fanzine, which has been published intermittently from Wheeling, Illinois by the married couple Leah Zeldes Smith and Dick Smith since the early 1990s. It was nominated for the Hugo Award in 1993, 1994 and 2001.
  5. Stet is a novel by the American author James Chapman; it was published by Fugue State Press in 2006.
  6. stet is a free software package for gathering comments about a text document via a webpage.
  7. The STET text editor (the 'STructured Editing Tool') may have been the first folding editor; its first version was written in 1977 by Mike Cowlishaw. The editor runs on the IBM VM/CMS operating system.
  8. STETS stands for the Southern Theological Education and Training Scheme . It delivers initial ministerial training for the Church of England, Methodist Church and the United Reformed Church in the southern region of England. ...
  9. A symbol used by proofreaders and typesetters to indicate that a word or phrase that was crossed out should still remain. This is usually marked by writing and circling the word stet above or beside the unwanted edit and underscoring the selection with dashes or dots. ...
  10. A proof mark meaning let the original copy stand.
  11. A Latin term meaning "let it stand," which instructs a printer or typesetter to ignore an alteration called for in a proof.
  12. A proofreader's symbol that is usually written in the copy margin, that indicates that the copy, which was marked for correction, should be left as it was.
  13. (From the Latin) Let it stand; let the original copy go as written. The hardest word for a copy editor to use. (courtesy of John E McIntyre)
  14. A proofreaders' mark meaning "let it stand"; do not make change — copy should remain as is.
  15. A proofreader’s mark signifying that other editing marks should be ignored. Stet is an abbreviation of the Latin phrase for “let it stand.”
  16. Proofreader's instruction to ignore a previous deletion or comment.
  17. Latin for "let it stand." Used by authors to negate corrections or changes marked by a copy-editor.
  18. Latin for “let it stand.” Writing stet next to a paragraph or sentence is to tell the copy editor that a change he has made is incorrect whereas the original was correct.
  19. "Let it stand" — marginal mark in proofreading to indicate that something previously deleted or marked for deletion should be retained.
  20. An editing term that cancels a deletion or change made (from Latin: Let it stand)
  21. An instruction that countermands a previously-marked correction, usually indicated by a broken underline. In Latin, ‘Let it stand’. See mark-up.
  22. (Let it stand) Instruction to revert to the original after initially changing a word or phrase.
  23. Proofreader’s mark for “restore to condition before mark up.”
  24. submaximal treadmill exercise test