Verbatim Contemporary Documentary Theatre Techniq

Verbatim with Verbatim is rarely used in this manner, with an explicit comparison. You would say "This text is verbatim" (with the reference assumed from context), or "This text is a verbatim copy of the ancient one". However, I have found some old examples of "verbatim with". "A Chapter on the Harmonizing Gospels" by "The Late Duke of Manchester" in The Journal of Sacred Literature in 1857 ...

Verbatim Contemporary Documentary Theatre Techniq 1

I'm looking for a word that is pretty much opposite to 'verbatim', but not 'paraphrased.' A word that means capturing the idea of something but not the exact phrasing. I'm typing notes from an eve...

The generally safe practice is to include the editor's version in parentheses, with an appropriate comment, or at least "-Ed") after quoting verbatim. "lking forward to seeing more gbl etfs" (I'm looking forward to seeing more global exchange traded funds. -Ed.)

Verbatim Contemporary Documentary Theatre Techniq 3

When reproducing an excerpt from a text identically (and properly referenced), we are quoting it 'verbatim'. Is there an equivalent term in English that refers to reproducing an image faithfully? I...

Verbatim Contemporary Documentary Theatre Techniq 4

phrase requests - Is there an equivalent term for 'verbatim' in the ...

I know that verbatim has a Latin origin, but why is it not spelled verbatum? English does not seem to have many Latin words that end in ‑im.

The first two situations address quotes in quotative structures ('direct speech', spoken or taken verbatim from a book, article, notice etc. It becomes tricky when it is important to faithfully show that an actual quote from a written source begins with a lower-case letter):

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