re-edit

(redirected from Reedit)

re-edit

(riːˈɛdɪt)
vb (tr)
1. (Journalism & Publishing) to edit (books, newspapers, films, etc) again
2. (Film) to edit (books, newspapers, films, etc) again
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

re-edit


Past participle: re-edited
Gerund: re-editing

Imperative
re-edit
re-edit
Present
I re-edit
you re-edit
he/she/it re-edits
we re-edit
you re-edit
they re-edit
Preterite
I re-edited
you re-edited
he/she/it re-edited
we re-edited
you re-edited
they re-edited
Present Continuous
I am re-editing
you are re-editing
he/she/it is re-editing
we are re-editing
you are re-editing
they are re-editing
Present Perfect
I have re-edited
you have re-edited
he/she/it has re-edited
we have re-edited
you have re-edited
they have re-edited
Past Continuous
I was re-editing
you were re-editing
he/she/it was re-editing
we were re-editing
you were re-editing
they were re-editing
Past Perfect
I had re-edited
you had re-edited
he/she/it had re-edited
we had re-edited
you had re-edited
they had re-edited
Future
I will re-edit
you will re-edit
he/she/it will re-edit
we will re-edit
you will re-edit
they will re-edit
Future Perfect
I will have re-edited
you will have re-edited
he/she/it will have re-edited
we will have re-edited
you will have re-edited
they will have re-edited
Future Continuous
I will be re-editing
you will be re-editing
he/she/it will be re-editing
we will be re-editing
you will be re-editing
they will be re-editing
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been re-editing
you have been re-editing
he/she/it has been re-editing
we have been re-editing
you have been re-editing
they have been re-editing
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been re-editing
you will have been re-editing
he/she/it will have been re-editing
we will have been re-editing
you will have been re-editing
they will have been re-editing
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been re-editing
you had been re-editing
he/she/it had been re-editing
we had been re-editing
you had been re-editing
they had been re-editing
Conditional
I would re-edit
you would re-edit
he/she/it would re-edit
we would re-edit
you would re-edit
they would re-edit
Past Conditional
I would have re-edited
you would have re-edited
he/she/it would have re-edited
we would have re-edited
you would have re-edited
they would have re-edited
Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011
Translations

re-edit

[ˈriːˈedɪt] VTreeditar
Collins Spanish Dictionary - Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005

re-edit

vtneu herausgeben; book, textnoch einmal redigieren; film, tapeneu schneiden
Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007
References in periodicals archive ?
* NYE allows and encourages everyone to join its growing network community including social networks like Twitter, Facebook, Reedit, Discord, etc.
[Then] they're put into this shared editing pool and they'll recut or reedit the live event to be redistributed in other markets."
Instead of producing one film after the other in a very short period, our filmmakers need to devote more time to create, edit and reedit their movies and videos.
Rosa Perelmuter (97-103) has pointed out that by the nineteenth century, copies of Sor Juana's works were scarce and difficult to obtain, which contributed (along with a general disdain for the Baroque) to the relatively few and often erroneous references to Sor Juana by nineteenth-century scholars, and the general neglect and ignorance of her work by readers until the first efforts to reedit her works began toward the end of the century.
In The Butterfly Effect it is even suggested quite literally that the brain should be seen as a film: think of your life as a film, rewind, go back, reedit. (Pisters, 51)
Melnick's portrait of Rothafel confirms, rather than alters, what we think we know about the relative authority of the exhibitor over the film text from the silent to the early sound periods, as witness his willingness occasionally to reedit the films he showed.
Because the interviewee did not know who the person was in the photo, I ended up having to cut the photo and reedit the video.
The rotund father of the clan helps Mel Gibson to reedit his remake of Mr Smith Goes to Washington, then the family accidentally runs over Ned Flanders in the spooky I Know What You Diddily-Iddly-Did.
As a result, claimed the blogger, the studio had asked director Jonathan Demme to reedit the film to remove the "more Hillary-esque gestures."