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Longman Dictionary English

From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Related topics: Literature, Linguistics
paraphrasepar‧a‧phrase1 /ˈpærəfreɪz/ ●○○ verb [transitive] ALSLto express in a shorter, clearer, or different way what someone has said or written → summarize To paraphrase Finkelstein, mathematics is a language, like English.
→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
paraphrase• If it is not a Minister, please will he paraphrase.• Ask them to paraphrase a short story, and they may repeat it verbatim without making changes.• To paraphrase an old saying, the water has to be there for the horse to be able to drink.• The article only paraphrased Castro's words, and gave no direct quotes.• If, however, an existential claim is expressed in such a manner, then it can be paraphrased in terms of valid inference.• To paraphrase Jefferson, that means every citizen should receive those services and be capable of using them.• This paraphrased perfectly my private plot to forget Charlie Northrup the way everybody else was forgetting him.• After frontal damage, the patient may just paraphrase the proverb.• Ever since, numerous writers have paraphrased these sentiments, either in their fiction or through their own self-scrutiny.
Related topics: Literature, Linguistics
paraphraseparaphrase2 ●○○ noun [countable] ALSLa statement that expresses in a shorter, clearer, or different way what someone has said or written → summary
Examples from the Corpus
paraphrase• A paraphrase usually substantially changes the language of the original, because all that matters is that the idea is conveyed.• A brutal summary and paraphrase of this follows.• In fact, the optimally relevant interpretation may be a summary rather than an exact paraphrase.• Can we even identify, for paraphrase purposes, what the underlying meaning is?• Longobardi provides Leibniz with accurate translations or paraphrases of the Analects passages cited above.• This structure of absence and intrusion corresponds to de Man's blend of quotation, paraphrase and commentary in Allegories of Reading.• These are only rough paraphrases, and we leave the finer details to the brave reader.• This paraphrase of Paul's words in Ephesians 4:26 guaranteed they not only resolved conflicts but also gave and received forgiveness.
Origin paraphrase2 (1500-1600) French Latin, from Greek, from paraphrazein “to paraphrase”
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