- A
paraphrase or
rephrase (/ˈpærəˌfreɪz/) is the
rendering of the same text in
different words without losing the
meaning of the text itself. More often...
-
Paraphrase or
paraphrasing in com****tional
linguistics is the
natural language processing task of
detecting and
generating paraphrases.
Applications of...
- of
paraphilias into
social identity structures. The
original rule was
rephrased and
reiterated as it went
viral on the Web. Some
common permutations omit...
- P****ive
constructions also use
auxiliary verbs. A p****ive
construction rephrases an
active construction in such a way that the
object of the
active phrase...
-
Gospels of
Matthew and Luke, "where the
sayings of
Jesus from Q were
rephrased to
avoid misunderstandings, and to fit
their own
situations and their...
- Ken
Robinson rephrased the
question in his 2006 TED talk...
- hit for Redding. In 1967,
Franklin (the "Queen of Soul") rearranged,
rephrased, and
covered "Respect",
resulting in one of her
biggest hits and her signature...
- unsatisfactory, and
wrote him a
second letter,
dated August 21, in
which they
rephrased their questions so that they
could be
answered simply as "yes" or "no...
- that Nixon's
presidential powers weakened during his tenure, thus (as
rephrased by the media) "prevent[ing] the
United States from
exploiting the [scandal]"...
-
portray or
stereotype their subjects as promiscuous. Many of
these are
rephrased sorority girl or Es**** girl jokes.
Blonde jokes nearly always take the...