What is the text all about?
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A text is traditionally defined as a piece of written or spoken material in its most basic form (as opposed to a paraphrase or summary). Any stretch of language that may be understood in context is referred to as a text.
Text in linguistics:
- The original words of something written, printed, or uttered, as opposed to a summary or paraphrase, are referred to as a text in linguistics.
- A coherent swath of language that can be subjected to critical examination.
Text in literary criticism:
- "Text" also refers to the original information content of a piece of writing in the field of literary criticism
- The "text" of a work is the primal symbolic arrangement of letters as originally composed, excluding later alterations, deterioration, commentary, translations, paratext, and so on.
Text in Literary theory:
- A text, according to literary theory, is any object that can be "read," whether it is a piece of literature, a street sign, a city block layout of buildings, or clothing styles.
- It's a jumble of symbols that conveys some sort of message. A text is something that conveys a set of meanings to the person who studies it in academic terminology. Texts were once restricted to written items such as books, magazines, and newspapers.
The text's concept isn't entirely stable. As technology for printing and spreading literature advances, it is always changing. Texts were traditionally published as printed stuff in bound volumes such as pamphlets or books. People are now more likely to come across texts in the digital realm, where the materials are becoming "more fluid,
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