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词汇 edit
释义

Definition of edit in English:

edit

verbedits, editing, edited ˈɛdɪtˈɛdət
[with object]
  • 1Prepare (written material) for publication by correcting, condensing, or otherwise modifying it.

    编辑,编选,选辑;校订

    Volume I was edited by J. Johnson

    第一册由J·约翰逊编辑。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • These letters have been edited for clarity and space.
    • All have been carefully edited with helpful introductions, notes, reading lists and useful chronologies.
    • The excerpts have been edited lightly for clarification.
    • Deborah is also editing an anthology regarding heterosexuality for Pluto Press.
    • The work on editing the typescript in preparation for publication continues.
    • The published first-hand accounts of veterans are edited for one purpose or another.
    • At the moment I may not be too good at pumping out new material but I seem to find critiquing and editing old stuff okay.
    • And so it is quite disappointing that this volume was very poorly edited.
    • Feel free to use and edit the stuff I write, please.
    • And what must he or she have thought when they were editing this stuff?
    • Even children's textbooks are edited to remove politically incorrect references.
    • He knows that the critical letters will be carefully edited for length.
    • Letters for publication must be signed and may be edited for space and clarity.
    • After all, journalists, not proprietors, actually write and edit these papers.
    • If you're some kind of a writer you might come back to them at intervals in search of material, or to edit them for publication.
    Synonyms
    correct, check, copy-edit
    improve, revise, emend, polish, modify, adapt, rewrite, reword, rework, rescript, redraft, rephrase
    assemble, prepare for publication
    shorten, condense, cut, abridge
    approve, censor, redact
    informal clean up, iron out
    1. 1.1 Choose material for (a film or radio or television programme) and arrange it to form a coherent whole.
      剪辑(电影、广播或电视节目)
      you could edit together a succession of short clips
      the story was ruthlessly edited down to its allotted span
      the footage wasn't good enough to be edited into broadcast form
      Example sentencesExamples
      • And that telephone conversation was edited down to a few minutes in the film, but it was close to an hour and a half long.
      • The one-hour debate (with ads and news breaks) was severely edited for the purposes of the documentary.
      • Two years in the Serengeti and 600 hours of footage later, Downer and his team had to edit a film which matched Nye's script.
      • Hundreds of hours of raw footage were edited down to 90 minutes by the U.S. film makers.
      • Then, the footage is carefully edited together and burned as a lesson to all concerned.
      • There's plenty of power on tap - enough to edit family videos - and most of the software you are likely to need is gratis.
      • Consequently, the snuff auteur edited the film to hide his identity.
      • The maker said it had edited the programme according to its time slot and had not allowed school-age children to be featured.
      • In some ways it almost feels like a much longer documentary designed for television that has been edited down for the cinema.
      • It gives you the opportunity to edit together your own version of three scenes.
      • We know that he did work on the editing a long time, partly because he hadn't edited digital video before.
      • We then put it in, as I was editing the film, so that as it was going together, we were laying the score and trying it out.
      • Theoretically, it is possible to shoot and edit a whole programme, in a matter of 2 days, for less than £1,000.
      • Surely the one advantage of this being on tape is they could edit this stuff down?
      • Equally, cinema documentaries may have to be edited down for television.
      • Premiere is a powerhouse of tools for editing your video giving you the equivalent of a studio full of traditional equipment only a few years ago.
      • When he started in TV news, crews edited news reports on film stock, prompting fewer edits and a slower visual pace.
      • They worked hard over the weekend and filmed some great material from which to edit the forthcoming video.
      • Some 200 hours of footage have been edited down to the less than two hours that make up the completed film.
      • I heard that he edited the film and showed it somewhere, but the footage is gone, and not in my hands anymore.
      Synonyms
      select, choose, assemble, organize, put together, arrange, rearrange
    2. 1.2 Change (text) on a computer.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Then I had to edit the text that showed up under the logo in the file boot.msg.
      • However, editing a file that uses entities in this way is tedious and difficult at best.
      • Techniques for editing the text displayed by a computer program are disclosed.
      • That's fine for display purposes, but if the file is edited and sent back to a PC, the original font selections are lost.
      • To make this value unchangeable, simply edit the file as shown.
      • Wiki is a piece of server software that allows users to freely create and edit web page content using any Web browser.
      • The software tracks who has edited a particular document and what changes were made.
      • There's no sense in trying to write / edit your text online, on a slow, timed connection.
      • Over the years I've used all kinds of software but a lot of the time I use my computer to edit text.
      • Administrative interfaces are available to edit records.
      • I'd rather not have to edit the history file manually, which seems to be the only way I know to cover my tracks.
      • Although it uses an XML language format, the code will be pretty familiar to anyone who has worked with HTML to edit web pages.
      • Finally, if you're done editing this file and want to see the first error in the next file use the: cnf command.
      • And because it's vector-based, designers can manipulate it without losing the ability to edit the text.
      Synonyms
      amend, emend, correct, alter, change, adapt, copy-edit, rewrite, redraft, rescript, recast, rephrase, rework, update, revamp
    3. 1.3edit something out Remove unnecessary or inappropriate material from a text, film, or radio or television programme.
      删节,删除,去掉
      the film's sexually explicit scenes have been edited out
      Example sentencesExamples
      • She played the unedited versions of songs - insisting that the meaning was changed when words were edited out.
      • The song almost made it into the film but Disney, who monitored every stage of the three-year production process, decided it was too long and edited it out.
      • Unfortunately, he said it in a show that was heavily scripted and not something that NBC was prepared for, but I regret that NBC edited it out on the West Coast.
      • It's clear that a great deal was edited out of Soderbergh's final cut, and, while the absence of this material doesn't render the storyline incoherent, there are occasions when the narrative becomes choppy.
      • Not only are they demanding an apology, the dissidents have also asked for the BBC's assurance that certain scenes will be edited out before the show is sold abroad.
      • He also told his staff to make sure those jokes were edited out of those shows if and when they were rerun.
      • A piano tinkles somewhere in the back of the room and a loud cough interrupts one song: no-one had yet devised the means to edit it out.
      • Most of the positive stuff has been edited out for effect, but the message is both clear and encouraging.
      • Nah, someone would have edited it out after seeing a rough cut, wouldn't they?
      • He seems to produce them without prior planning, and there is no effort to edit them out.
      • I'd had to edit some bits out to make it more concise.
      • He edited this remark out of the printed version of his comments, because he had found that people tended to recall his playful statements more readily than his serious ones.
      • In the end, this chapter will be edited out of the book, but you or I, or whoever writes it will have a lot of stimulating conversations that may very well unearth other directions for discussion.
      • We'll assume that Brad answered that question but the explanation was edited out for space in the final edition.
      • However, when someone states something totally and obviously false as a matter of fact, it is up to the paper to either edit the error out, or provide the correct information.
      • As a consequence that sequence was edited out in some parts of the country.
      • The author apparently felt that this scene was too horrific and graphic to present to the audience, so he shrewdly decided to edit them out.
      • Those Big Brother tactics were edited out of the official White House transcript.
      • And so it was edited out and it was actually changed to three times a week!
      • The best part is that all the waiting has been edited out, and we just get the good bits.
      Synonyms
      delete, cross out, cross through, strike out, score out, scratch out, cancel, put a line through, blue-pencil, ink out, edit out, blank out
  • 2Be editor of (a newspaper or magazine)

    主编(报纸,杂志),担任…的编辑

    he began to edit the magazine in 1923
    Example sentencesExamples
    • While at Bucknell University, he edited the conservative newspaper, the Sentinel.
    • He edited that newspaper from 1913 until his death in 1917.
    • He has edited the programme for more than 30 years, but if anybody can do it, it is him.
    • In 1838 he founded and briefly edited a newspaper, The Long Islander.
    • He also edited a local newspaper and was a prominent member of the al-Dawa party, which nominally opposes the occupation and calls for Iraq to become an Islamic state.
    • He became a university lecturer, and from 1957 edited The Africanist newspaper.
    • I edited a weekly newspaper in New Orleans and then did some freelancing for Deneuve Magazine.
    • He edits a newspaper that has won so many national and state journalism awards that he displays only the first-place plaques.
    • Yet, she managed to edit a community newspaper in Chennai for a brief period.
    • As an information specialist, he edited a military newspaper, the Southern Cross.
    • He edited newspapers and participated in numerous reform movements.
    • For a time wen I was younger, I even edited a fanzine, though this was later abandoned in favour of getting more involved and writing for other people's fanzines.
    • However, not much is known about the life, times and journalistic career of the legendary poet who had edited several newspapers during the freedom struggle.
    • If you're suddenly editing a newspaper, it's probably not at all what you thought it was going to be like when you were a writer.
    • I edit a call-in programme for BBC Radio Leeds which today will be looking at whether its ever right to lie.
    • She edited the school newspaper and was a class president.
    • I'm willing to bet she edited the college newspaper.
    • Kennedy becomes the first woman to edit a national newspaper in Ireland and only the fourth editor of the Irish Times in 40 years.
    • Nelson was a graduate of Indiana University, where he edited the student newspaper when Ernie Pyle was one of the writers.
    • He was a writer, philosopher and political activist, and edited several newspapers and magazines.
    Synonyms
    be the editor of, control the content of, control, direct, run, manage, be in charge of, be responsible for, be at the helm of, be chief of, head, lead, supervise, superintend, oversee, preside over, be the boss of
    informal head up
nounPlural edits ˈɛdɪtˈɛdət
  • 1A change or correction made as a result of editing.

    编辑;校订;剪辑

    the system has no word wrap feature—so even small edits involved extensive rekeying
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The edits adjust the pacing to keep the movie feeling like one big Looney Tunes epic, rather than a cheap ‘clip job’ compilation.
    • All of these segments were digitally captured on video using a single camera in one uninterrupted, 90-minute take, with no edits or re-shoots.
    • And then it goes one step further: 99% of the curse words and sexual references are removed in odd, disorienting edits.
    • But the Hollywood Reporter concluded that ‘even extensive edits had failed to produce an acceptably balanced portrayal.’
    • It makes sense only in tiny individual edits - exactly like every other dimwitted action spectacular.
    • But don't hold these cinematically essential edits against the genre.
    • I hope you'll participate in this effort by contributing feedback, edits, criticism, corrections, and additional anecdotes, either through the comments field below or by sending me email.
    • Miramax, initially intending to release the movie to compete for the 2002 Oscars, shelved the picture at the last minute after deciding that re-shoots and edits were needed to get it into shape.
    • After they painstakingly restored the film to its 222 minute glory, David Lean wanted to make a few edits.
    • There have also been rumors of massive last-minute edits (possibly connected with Webb's demand), which may explain the choppiness of the film's narrative.
    • There were endless delays, right up until the premiere at Cannes earlier this year, where the film arrived a couple of days late due to some last minute edits.
    • These consist of scenes that have small edits in them, either a few words of dialogue or a joke that was eventually cut from the final film.
    • When he started in TV news, crews edited news reports on film stock, prompting fewer edits and a slower visual pace.
    Synonyms
    revision, alteration, change, modification, qualification, adaptation, adjustment
    1. 1.1 A version of written, recorded, or filmed material made as a result of editing.
      a rough edit of some delightful Javanese gamelan music
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Having seen a recent edit in Hong Kong, the film is getting better day by day.
      • The final edit premieres tomorrow evening.
      • Can't wait to share the final edit with you in the coming months!
      • There are many edits of this film out there - some with nudity and some without.
      • Sometimes scenes that work on the stage don't work in the final edit.
      • As the days went on, I was keeping a close eye on how many shots I had in the bag, and I began cutting a rough edit of all the best clips we had.
      • A special edit of Basement Jaxx's Good Luck will accompany the opening coverage.
      • On the DVD that comes with the box set, a specially produced edit of the film makes this narrative clear.
      • Studio executives agreed to re-edit the movie to appease censors, who are now happy with the final edit.
      • The film received 20 minutes of applause when a rough edit was shown and won the Palme d'Or at the 1960 Cannes Film Festival.
      • Rough edits of visuals were sent out to musicians who were asked to use them as the basis for producing soundtracks.
      • Has anyone else seen the new edit of Star Wars?
      • First up are a few remixes and edits of previously released songs, which are intriguing but hardly essential.
      • Several of these tracks are edits of lengthy jam sessions.
    2. 1.2 A featured selection of clothes, accessories, beauty products, etc. from a particular season or collection.
      this is ELLE’s personal Autumn/Winter 2012 edit
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The high street edit: we bring you our pick of the season's best buys.
      • Are you a fan of Rebecca’s designs? What do you make of her Autumn/Winter 2012 edit?
      • Be crafty with our edit of spring's best patchwork pieces.
      • Last night, I went to the Time Warner Center to hear all about the L.K. Bennett Spring/Summer Edit.
      • The shoe edit – we’ve got a great selection of treats for your feet, from dainty heels to flip flops, which will get you through every occasion this summer.
      • For a quick-fix capsule beach wardrobe, here's our edit of the best at M&S.
      • Have a peek through our gallery to find our edit of the sales pieces worth splurging on.
      • Shop our edit of the best workwear pieces to nail office chic
      • Myer’s Autumn/Winter edit received a spectacular unveiling at Mural Hall last Thursday.
      • Get inspired by our top two accessory trends as seen in the JETS Autumn/Winter edit for the season ahead!

Origin

Late 18th century (as a verb): partly a back-formation from editor, reinforced by French éditer 'to edit' (from édition 'edition').

Rhymes

accredit, credit, subedit

Definition of edit in US English:

edit

verbˈɛdətˈedət
[with object]
  • 1Prepare (written material) for publication by correcting, condensing, or otherwise modifying it.

    编辑,编选,选辑;校订

    Volume I was edited by J. Johnson

    第一册由J·约翰逊编辑。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • These letters have been edited for clarity and space.
    • Even children's textbooks are edited to remove politically incorrect references.
    • The excerpts have been edited lightly for clarification.
    • Feel free to use and edit the stuff I write, please.
    • Deborah is also editing an anthology regarding heterosexuality for Pluto Press.
    • If you're some kind of a writer you might come back to them at intervals in search of material, or to edit them for publication.
    • And so it is quite disappointing that this volume was very poorly edited.
    • Letters for publication must be signed and may be edited for space and clarity.
    • The work on editing the typescript in preparation for publication continues.
    • And what must he or she have thought when they were editing this stuff?
    • At the moment I may not be too good at pumping out new material but I seem to find critiquing and editing old stuff okay.
    • He knows that the critical letters will be carefully edited for length.
    • The published first-hand accounts of veterans are edited for one purpose or another.
    • After all, journalists, not proprietors, actually write and edit these papers.
    • All have been carefully edited with helpful introductions, notes, reading lists and useful chronologies.
    Synonyms
    correct, check, copy-edit
    select, choose, assemble, organize, put together, arrange, rearrange
    1. 1.1 Choose material for (a movie or a radio or television program) and arrange it to form a coherent whole.
      剪辑(电影、广播或电视节目)
      you could edit together a succession of short clips
      the story was ruthlessly edited down to its allotted span
      the footage wasn't good enough to be edited into broadcast form
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Theoretically, it is possible to shoot and edit a whole programme, in a matter of 2 days, for less than £1,000.
      • They worked hard over the weekend and filmed some great material from which to edit the forthcoming video.
      • In some ways it almost feels like a much longer documentary designed for television that has been edited down for the cinema.
      • Premiere is a powerhouse of tools for editing your video giving you the equivalent of a studio full of traditional equipment only a few years ago.
      • Two years in the Serengeti and 600 hours of footage later, Downer and his team had to edit a film which matched Nye's script.
      • Then, the footage is carefully edited together and burned as a lesson to all concerned.
      • Surely the one advantage of this being on tape is they could edit this stuff down?
      • When he started in TV news, crews edited news reports on film stock, prompting fewer edits and a slower visual pace.
      • And that telephone conversation was edited down to a few minutes in the film, but it was close to an hour and a half long.
      • It gives you the opportunity to edit together your own version of three scenes.
      • Some 200 hours of footage have been edited down to the less than two hours that make up the completed film.
      • Equally, cinema documentaries may have to be edited down for television.
      • We know that he did work on the editing a long time, partly because he hadn't edited digital video before.
      • There's plenty of power on tap - enough to edit family videos - and most of the software you are likely to need is gratis.
      • The maker said it had edited the programme according to its time slot and had not allowed school-age children to be featured.
      • Consequently, the snuff auteur edited the film to hide his identity.
      • We then put it in, as I was editing the film, so that as it was going together, we were laying the score and trying it out.
      • I heard that he edited the film and showed it somewhere, but the footage is gone, and not in my hands anymore.
      • The one-hour debate (with ads and news breaks) was severely edited for the purposes of the documentary.
      • Hundreds of hours of raw footage were edited down to 90 minutes by the U.S. film makers.
      Synonyms
      select, choose, assemble, organize, put together, arrange, rearrange
    2. 1.2 Change (text) on a computer.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Then I had to edit the text that showed up under the logo in the file boot.msg.
      • There's no sense in trying to write / edit your text online, on a slow, timed connection.
      • To make this value unchangeable, simply edit the file as shown.
      • Although it uses an XML language format, the code will be pretty familiar to anyone who has worked with HTML to edit web pages.
      • Techniques for editing the text displayed by a computer program are disclosed.
      • I'd rather not have to edit the history file manually, which seems to be the only way I know to cover my tracks.
      • The software tracks who has edited a particular document and what changes were made.
      • Administrative interfaces are available to edit records.
      • And because it's vector-based, designers can manipulate it without losing the ability to edit the text.
      • Over the years I've used all kinds of software but a lot of the time I use my computer to edit text.
      • Finally, if you're done editing this file and want to see the first error in the next file use the: cnf command.
      • That's fine for display purposes, but if the file is edited and sent back to a PC, the original font selections are lost.
      • However, editing a file that uses entities in this way is tedious and difficult at best.
      • Wiki is a piece of server software that allows users to freely create and edit web page content using any Web browser.
      Synonyms
      amend, emend, correct, alter, change, adapt, copy-edit, rewrite, redraft, rescript, recast, rephrase, rework, update, revamp
    3. 1.3edit something out Remove unnecessary or inappropriate words, sounds, or scenes from a text, movie, or radio or television program.
      删节,删除,去掉
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It's clear that a great deal was edited out of Soderbergh's final cut, and, while the absence of this material doesn't render the storyline incoherent, there are occasions when the narrative becomes choppy.
      • He also told his staff to make sure those jokes were edited out of those shows if and when they were rerun.
      • She played the unedited versions of songs - insisting that the meaning was changed when words were edited out.
      • The best part is that all the waiting has been edited out, and we just get the good bits.
      • Unfortunately, he said it in a show that was heavily scripted and not something that NBC was prepared for, but I regret that NBC edited it out on the West Coast.
      • Those Big Brother tactics were edited out of the official White House transcript.
      • Most of the positive stuff has been edited out for effect, but the message is both clear and encouraging.
      • The author apparently felt that this scene was too horrific and graphic to present to the audience, so he shrewdly decided to edit them out.
      • A piano tinkles somewhere in the back of the room and a loud cough interrupts one song: no-one had yet devised the means to edit it out.
      • Not only are they demanding an apology, the dissidents have also asked for the BBC's assurance that certain scenes will be edited out before the show is sold abroad.
      • As a consequence that sequence was edited out in some parts of the country.
      • We'll assume that Brad answered that question but the explanation was edited out for space in the final edition.
      • The song almost made it into the film but Disney, who monitored every stage of the three-year production process, decided it was too long and edited it out.
      • He edited this remark out of the printed version of his comments, because he had found that people tended to recall his playful statements more readily than his serious ones.
      • And so it was edited out and it was actually changed to three times a week!
      • In the end, this chapter will be edited out of the book, but you or I, or whoever writes it will have a lot of stimulating conversations that may very well unearth other directions for discussion.
      • However, when someone states something totally and obviously false as a matter of fact, it is up to the paper to either edit the error out, or provide the correct information.
      • He seems to produce them without prior planning, and there is no effort to edit them out.
      • I'd had to edit some bits out to make it more concise.
      • Nah, someone would have edited it out after seeing a rough cut, wouldn't they?
      Synonyms
      delete, cross out, cross through, strike out, score out, scratch out, cancel, put a line through, blue-pencil, ink out, edit out, blank out
  • 2Be editor of (a newspaper or magazine).

    主编(报纸,杂志),担任…的编辑

    Example sentencesExamples
    • She edited the school newspaper and was a class president.
    • He edits a newspaper that has won so many national and state journalism awards that he displays only the first-place plaques.
    • In 1838 he founded and briefly edited a newspaper, The Long Islander.
    • He became a university lecturer, and from 1957 edited The Africanist newspaper.
    • I'm willing to bet she edited the college newspaper.
    • He was a writer, philosopher and political activist, and edited several newspapers and magazines.
    • Nelson was a graduate of Indiana University, where he edited the student newspaper when Ernie Pyle was one of the writers.
    • If you're suddenly editing a newspaper, it's probably not at all what you thought it was going to be like when you were a writer.
    • While at Bucknell University, he edited the conservative newspaper, the Sentinel.
    • He edited newspapers and participated in numerous reform movements.
    • I edit a call-in programme for BBC Radio Leeds which today will be looking at whether its ever right to lie.
    • I edited a weekly newspaper in New Orleans and then did some freelancing for Deneuve Magazine.
    • Yet, she managed to edit a community newspaper in Chennai for a brief period.
    • For a time wen I was younger, I even edited a fanzine, though this was later abandoned in favour of getting more involved and writing for other people's fanzines.
    • Kennedy becomes the first woman to edit a national newspaper in Ireland and only the fourth editor of the Irish Times in 40 years.
    • He has edited the programme for more than 30 years, but if anybody can do it, it is him.
    • As an information specialist, he edited a military newspaper, the Southern Cross.
    • He also edited a local newspaper and was a prominent member of the al-Dawa party, which nominally opposes the occupation and calls for Iraq to become an Islamic state.
    • However, not much is known about the life, times and journalistic career of the legendary poet who had edited several newspapers during the freedom struggle.
    • He edited that newspaper from 1913 until his death in 1917.
    Synonyms
    be the editor of, control the content of, control, direct, run, manage, be in charge of, be responsible for, be at the helm of, be chief of, head, lead, supervise, superintend, oversee, preside over, be the boss of
nounˈɛdətˈedət
  • 1A change or correction made as a result of editing.

    编辑;校订;剪辑

    Example sentencesExamples
    • But don't hold these cinematically essential edits against the genre.
    • The edits adjust the pacing to keep the movie feeling like one big Looney Tunes epic, rather than a cheap ‘clip job’ compilation.
    • But the Hollywood Reporter concluded that ‘even extensive edits had failed to produce an acceptably balanced portrayal.’
    • Miramax, initially intending to release the movie to compete for the 2002 Oscars, shelved the picture at the last minute after deciding that re-shoots and edits were needed to get it into shape.
    • It makes sense only in tiny individual edits - exactly like every other dimwitted action spectacular.
    • And then it goes one step further: 99% of the curse words and sexual references are removed in odd, disorienting edits.
    • When he started in TV news, crews edited news reports on film stock, prompting fewer edits and a slower visual pace.
    • After they painstakingly restored the film to its 222 minute glory, David Lean wanted to make a few edits.
    • There were endless delays, right up until the premiere at Cannes earlier this year, where the film arrived a couple of days late due to some last minute edits.
    • These consist of scenes that have small edits in them, either a few words of dialogue or a joke that was eventually cut from the final film.
    • There have also been rumors of massive last-minute edits (possibly connected with Webb's demand), which may explain the choppiness of the film's narrative.
    • All of these segments were digitally captured on video using a single camera in one uninterrupted, 90-minute take, with no edits or re-shoots.
    • I hope you'll participate in this effort by contributing feedback, edits, criticism, corrections, and additional anecdotes, either through the comments field below or by sending me email.
    Synonyms
    revision, alteration, change, modification, qualification, adaptation, adjustment
    1. 1.1 A version of written, recorded, or filmed material made as a result of editing.
      a rough edit of some delightful Javanese gamelan music
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Can't wait to share the final edit with you in the coming months!
      • Having seen a recent edit in Hong Kong, the film is getting better day by day.
      • First up are a few remixes and edits of previously released songs, which are intriguing but hardly essential.
      • The final edit premieres tomorrow evening.
      • Rough edits of visuals were sent out to musicians who were asked to use them as the basis for producing soundtracks.
      • The film received 20 minutes of applause when a rough edit was shown and won the Palme d'Or at the 1960 Cannes Film Festival.
      • There are many edits of this film out there - some with nudity and some without.
      • Several of these tracks are edits of lengthy jam sessions.
      • On the DVD that comes with the box set, a specially produced edit of the film makes this narrative clear.
      • Has anyone else seen the new edit of Star Wars?
      • A special edit of Basement Jaxx's Good Luck will accompany the opening coverage.
      • As the days went on, I was keeping a close eye on how many shots I had in the bag, and I began cutting a rough edit of all the best clips we had.
      • Studio executives agreed to re-edit the movie to appease censors, who are now happy with the final edit.
      • Sometimes scenes that work on the stage don't work in the final edit.
    2. 1.2 A featured selection of clothes, accessories, beauty products, etc. from a particular season or collection.
      this is ELLE’s personal Autumn/Winter 2012 edit
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Myer’s Autumn/Winter edit received a spectacular unveiling at Mural Hall last Thursday.
      • Get inspired by our top two accessory trends as seen in the JETS Autumn/Winter edit for the season ahead!
      • Last night, I went to the Time Warner Center to hear all about the L.K. Bennett Spring/Summer Edit.
      • Be crafty with our edit of spring's best patchwork pieces.
      • Are you a fan of Rebecca’s designs? What do you make of her Autumn/Winter 2012 edit?
      • Shop our edit of the best workwear pieces to nail office chic
      • Have a peek through our gallery to find our edit of the sales pieces worth splurging on.
      • For a quick-fix capsule beach wardrobe, here's our edit of the best at M&S.
      • The shoe edit – we’ve got a great selection of treats for your feet, from dainty heels to flip flops, which will get you through every occasion this summer.
      • The high street edit: we bring you our pick of the season's best buys.

Origin

Late 18th century (as a verb): partly a back-formation from editor, reinforced by French éditer ‘to edit’ (from édition ‘edition’).

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