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Revision Common

Origin: Latin suffix -sion

Revision has 6 different meanings across 1 category:

Noun

Definitions
Noun
1

the act of revising or altering (involving reconsideration and modification)

"it would require a drastic revision of his opinion"

2

the act of rewriting something

"After the editor pointed out several factual errors, we spent the weekend on a complete revision of the article."

3

something that has been written again

"the rewrite was much better"

4

The process of revising:

"The professor's feedback turned our initial draft into a much stronger piece through careful revision."

5

The action or process of reviewing, editing and amending.

"After three rounds of revision, the manuscript finally met the editor's standards for publication."

In plain English: Revision is the act of going over something again to remember it better.

"She spent the evening doing revision for her upcoming math exam."

Verb
1

To provide with a new vision.

"The artist's latest exhibition was nothing less than a complete revision of her early work, offering viewers a new perspective on familiar scenes."

In plain English: To revise something means to change it again after looking at it closely.

"We need to revise the plan before we start the project."

Usage: This verb means to update something by incorporating fresh ideas or perspectives, often used in creative fields like art and design rather than academic study. It is frequently confused with the noun form of revision, which refers to correcting errors instead of changing one's viewpoint.

Example Sentences
"She spent the evening doing revision for her upcoming math exam." noun
"The student spent the weekend on revision to prepare for her final exams." noun
"He made some quick revisions to his essay before submitting it to the teacher." noun
"After years of working abroad, she decided that returning home was a major life revision." noun
"We need to revise the plan before we start the project." verb
Related Terms
Broader Terms (hypernyms)
transformation rewriting writing
Narrower Terms (hyponyms)
distraction modulation qualification reorganization transfiguration

Origin

The word revision entered English through French as a borrowing from the Latin term revīsio. Originally meaning an act of looking again or reviewing something, it carried this same core sense into modern usage.

Rhyming Words
ion aion tion zion pion sion gion bion fion lion dion cion rion orion obion axion deion trion diion arion
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