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View synonyms for emend

emend

[ ih-mend ]

verb (used with object)

  1. to edit or change (a text).
  2. to free from faults or errors; correct.


emend

/ ɪˈmɛnd /

verb

  1. tr to make corrections or improvements in (a text) by critical editing
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Derived Forms

  • eˈmendable, adjective
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Other Words From

  • e·menda·ble adjective
  • none·menda·ble adjective
  • une·menda·ble adjective
  • une·mended adjective
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Word History and Origins

Origin of emend1

1375–1425; late Middle English (< Middle French emender ) < Latin ēmendāre “to correct,” equivalent to ē- e- 1 + mend(um) “fault” + -āre infinitive suffix
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Word History and Origins

Origin of emend1

C15: from Latin ēmendāre to correct, from ē- out + mendum a mistake
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Synonym Study

See amend.
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Example Sentences

Bowman lived in New York, and had no children—surely it wasn’t much to ask for him to emend a plan?

And it grows increasingly clear that the document in Voth’s hands has itself been “doctored”—emended, rectified, ardently ministered to, but also violated.

“They can’t leave them,” said I, and then, emending: “We. We cannot be.”

In his 1897 novel, “An Antarctic Mystery,” he saw fit to emend Poe, rescuing Pym from the boiling sea only to kill him off on a lodestone mountain.

Several verbs ending in t or d have all but dropped the emending in the past tense.

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