editor
edi·tor AW [editor editors] BrE [ˈedɪtə(r)] NAmE [ˈedɪtər] noun 1. a person who is in charge of a newspaper, magazine, etc, or part of one, and who decides what should be included •the editor of the Washington Post •the sports/financial/fashion, etc. editor 2. a person who prepares a book to be published, for example by checking and correcting the text, making improvements, etc. see also ↑copy editor, ↑subeditor 3. a person who prepares a film/movie, radio or television programme for being shown or broadcast by deciding what to include, and what order it should be in 4. a person who works as a journalist for radio or television reporting on a particular area of news •our economics editor 5. a person who chooses texts written by one or by several writers and prepares them to be published in a book • She's the editor of a new collection of ghost stories. 6. (computing)a program that allows you to change stored text or data Derived Word: ↑editorship Word Origin: mid 17th cent.: from Latin, producer (of games), publisher, from edit- ‘produced, put out’, from the verb edere. Example Bank: •On page 12, our City editor comments on the takeover bid. •Russell did a terrific job as book review editor. •She's the editor of a national magazine. •the fashion/industrial/economics editor
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