释义 |
annotate /ˈanəteɪt /verb [with object]Add notes to (a text or diagram) giving explanation or comment: (as adjective annotated) an annotated bibliography...- For Japanese speakers who use English as a second language, it is helpful to annotate this text in Japanese so that images may be recalled by Japanese keywords.
- I read it closely and annotated it extensively, as is my habit in reading generally.
- To annotate means to add explanation to information - extra ‘commentary information’ in terms of the Online Dictionary of Computing.
Synonyms comment on, add notes/footnotes to, gloss; explain, interpret, elucidate, explicate rare footnote, margin, marginalize Derivatives annotatable adjective ...- This Tcl Book system allows you to create a simple annotatable book out of plain text files.
- So, if you haven't seen the annotatable audio demo already, it's a wiki-like interface for dividing BBC radio programmes into segments and annotating and tagging each section.
- This is the base interface that all annotatable objects must implement.
annotative adjective ...- Some languages, such as Perl and Python, have objects which can contain arbitrary key-value pairs, and it therefore looks at first glance like it ought to be possible to write simple annotative code in Perl or Python.
- Normal non-annotative text is always displayed at any viewport scale, just as in AutoCAD 2007 and earlier.
- In the last post we looked at how to add a new annotative scale to an AutoCAD drawing. In this post we'll look at what's needed to make an object annotative.
annotator /ˈanəteɪtə / noun ...- He was a chronic annotator, editor and commentator, loving the detail of government but disliking the main business.
- These annotations are added by a team of expert annotators who extract this information primarily from journal publications.
- An example of the support of rebellion in the notes is found in that on Exodus 1: 19, where the Geneva annotators endorse the disobedience of the Egyptian midwives regarding the killings of Hebrew male children.
Origin Late 16th century: from Latin annotat- 'marked', from the verb annotare, from ad- 'to' + nota 'a mark'. |