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rewritten

Rewritten is the past participle of the verb rewrite. It describes something that has been revised or transformed through rewriting. The word combines the prefix re- meaning again with write, with the past participle suffix -en, yielding rewritten.

Usage: In writing and editing, a rewritten draft has undergone substantial changes in content, organization, or

Examples: The editor asked the author to submit a rewritten version that better supports the argument. A

In copyright and licensing contexts, a rewritten work may be considered a derivative work if it borrows

Etymology: The word comes from the combination of re- (again) and write; the past participle form is

See also: rewrite, revision, paraphrase, redraft, editing, derivative work.

style.
Rewriting
can
address
clarity,
accuracy,
bias,
or
tone.
It
may
involve
rephrasing
sentences,
restructuring
paragraphs,
removing
redundancies,
or
adding
new
information.
The
term
is
commonly
used
in
journalism,
publishing,
academia,
and
content
creation.
It
is
distinct
from
editing,
which
tends
to
imply
more
mechanical
corrections,
whereas
rewriting
often
implies
more
substantial
changes.
website's
terms
of
service
were
rewritten
to
comply
with
the
new
regulations.
In
software,
the
term
can
describe
code
that
has
been
rewritten
to
improve
efficiency
or
readability,
though
"refactoring"
is
also
used.
substantial
elements
from
the
source.
Ownership
and
permissions
depend
on
the
original
rights
holder
and
jurisdiction.
rewritten.