Someone who puts text into appropriate form for publication.
Formulate in a particular style or language.
Sinônimos
Examples for "put"
Examples for "put"
1She's a good example to other government officials, put it that way.
2She said law reform could help put an end to this discrimination.
3The result will be put out to public comment for 15 days.
4However, the global financial crisis has put some banks in a bind.
5That way I put off going home until the last possible moment.
1The election result has cast doubt on popular support for that project.
2Events surrounding CervicalCheck continue to cast a shadow over the health service.
3Animal prints: we think they're best left to cast members of Eastenders.
4The withdrawal agreement must give legal effect to that 'cast iron' guarantee.
5Clive Fugill said Covid-19 cast doubt on whether that legacy could continue.
1Consumers have started the new year in a positive frame of mind.
2No time frame was given but experts said it could take months.
3We know the answer, the question is merely around the time frame.
4Coping in the case of COVID means identifying a short time frame.
5It will by supported by the EU's fifth frame work research programme.
1One end of the couch was in firelight, the other in shadow.
2The blood of the pauper shall smear the couch of the indolent.
3His body tautened against the straps holding it in the acceleration couch.
4This week has been a good one for lazy, couch-bound iPad owners.
5He sat down in one of the big arm-chairs facing the couch.
Prepare for publication or presentation by correcting, revising, or adapting.
1They will ignore requests, take decades to process them or redact embarrassing information.
2It's not clear whether HP's legal team tried to redact the customer contact information.
3The banking inquiry has agreed to redact the written statement of developer Johnny Ronan.
4Here's a quote Robin Thicke would probably like to redact.
5Indeed, multiple annotators may be required to consistently redact information that represents each PHI class.
6Barr also has said he planned to redact material related to intelligence-gathering sources and methods.
7The solution to qualms about privacy is to redact.
8The department maintains that Barr must redact confidential and classified information from the nearly 400-page document.
9How much of the report would Barr redact?
10The judge also gave the government until Friday to apply to redact any portion of the agreement.
11No News International or News Corporation officer or employee took any part in deciding what to redact.
12It would also not redact the threat of the use of these weapons again in the near future.
13Greene responded by playing whack-a-mole-lockingdown mailing lists, deleting documents, or asking employees to redact Google+ posts.
14They will redact the records.
15Individual departments will likely have countless policies on when to preserve video, and when to destroy or redact it.
16Pyne on Monday defended the decision to redact the audit report, insisting there were national security grounds justifying the decision.