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revised

Revised is an adjective formed from the verb revise. It describes something that has been altered, corrected, or updated from an earlier form. The changes can be minor or substantial, and the term is commonly used for documents, texts, plans, and data that have undergone review.

In publishing, a revised edition or revised manuscript indicates edits made after initial release to fix errors,

Notable uses include the historical Revised Version, an English translation of the Bible completed in the 1880s,

See also: revision, revise, edition, updated version.

clarify
meaning,
or
incorporate
new
information.
In
legal
or
policy
contexts,
a
document
may
be
issued
as
revised
to
reflect
subsequent
amendments
or
corrections.
The
word’s
etymology
traces
to
the
Latin
revisus,
from
re-
“again”
and
videre
“to
see,”
via
Old
French
and
Middle
English
routes—a
sense
of
looking
at
something
again
to
make
changes.
and
later
translations
such
as
the
Revised
Standard
Version
and
the
New
Revised
Standard
Version.
In
everyday
language,
people
say
a
plan
or
proposal
has
been
revised
after
feedback
or
testing.
Distinctions
are
sometimes
made
between
revised
(updated
or
corrected)
and
updated
or
amended,
which
can
signal
different
scopes
of
change:
revision
often
implies
a
thorough
reexamination,
while
update
can
be
smaller,
and
amendment
may
modify
specific
provisions.