When people distill something in a paraphrase, they are condensing important points.
Distill down, or boil down, as an idiom, means to get to the essence of something, or to simplify it.
Shorten it, convey the meaning in fewer words.
Paraphrase can be a noun and a verb. Noun: restatement of text in different words to clarify meaning. Verb: to restate something.
An antonym for the word paraphrase is quotation.
It means to express in one's own words.
condense important points.
distill
Distill down, or boil down, as an idiom, means to get to the essence of something, or to simplify it.
Alliteration is a written sound, such as boom, or bang. So the paraphrase of alliteration would be something such as if the alliteration was "crash", the paraphrase alliteration would be something like, " the plates went crash as they hit the floor". So, a paraphrase alliteration is basically a paraphrase with an alliteration.
Shorten it, convey the meaning in fewer words.
using a quotation might not be useful
To "paraphrase" something is to convey the general meaning or thought, to get the "gist" of what is being said. A paraphrase translation can either be literally, the translation of a paraphrase or could mean a non literal translation.
Paraphrase can be a noun and a verb. Noun: restatement of text in different words to clarify meaning. Verb: to restate something.
it is a statement 'to clarify' and to put something in other words
Yes, this is how Rum is made.
The nearest meaning of something. Something that says about the same thing in different words.
Another word for distill is clarify.