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paraphrase

Paraphrase is the restatement of a text or passage in different words while preserving the original meaning. It may preserve the information, intent, and tone while changing wording, sentence structure, and order. The purpose is to clarify content, simplify complex ideas, translate between languages, or adapt material for a specific audience, context, or medium.

Paraphrase differs from a summary in length and emphasis. A summary condenses main ideas, often reducing detail.

Techniques include rewriting sentences in different syntax, substituting synonyms, changing voice and sentence length, and reordering

Best practices: understand the source, note key ideas, avoid copying distinctive phrasings, aim for fresh prose,

Example: Original: "Global warming increases the likelihood of extreme weather events." Paraphrase: "Rising global temperatures increase

A
quotation
repeats
the
exact
wording
and
requires
quotation
marks
and
a
citation.
A
close
paraphrase
is
a
restatement
that
is
very
similar
in
form
and
wording
and
can
verge
on
copying;
it
should
be
avoided
by
using
distinct
phrasing
and
structure.
information.
It
is
important
to
retain
technical
terms
and
core
meanings,
to
verify
accuracy,
and
to
cite
the
original
source.
To
avoid
plagiarism,
paraphrases
should
be
sufficiently
original
and
accompanied
by
a
citation.
and
attribute
the
source
with
a
citation.
In
academic
writing,
paraphrases
should
be
accompanied
by
a
citation
to
the
original
work
and,
when
appropriate,
the
page
or
section.
the
chances
of
severe
weather."