Paraphrasing is the act in which a statement or remark is explained in other words or another way — as to clarify the meaning, or when a direct quotation is unavailable. Often, a paraphrase might substitute a euphemism for an actual statement, in order to avoid offense. As with a quotation, a paraphrase is introduced by a verbum dicendi, or disclaimer.
Historical usage relating to the Bible
Paraphrases are also a type of literature arising, originally, out of
biblical exegesis. In the early history of the
Christian church,
evangelists and missionaries needed the
Gospel and the
Pauline epistles written in a manner suitable for local populations and less educated priests. Therefore, various Church authorities had "paraphrases" issued. While, until the
Reformation, the Bible remained in the
Vulgate Latin (in the Western church), believers and pastors needed
vernacular commentaries and explanations of scripture. The most famous of the paraphrases was probably
The Paraphrases of Erasmus, a commentary on the Gospels written by D.
Erasmus, which
Edward VI of England ordered to be posted in all parish churches in
England in
1547. The section of that paraphrase on the
Gospel of John was translated into English by the Princess
Mary.
Modern usage relating to the Bible
The word paraphrase is used when talking about
Bible translations, to denote a translation that is at the far right end of the word-for-word (literal) vs. thought-for-thought spectrum, or more formally the
formal equivalence vs.
dynamic equivalence spectrum. Examples of Bible translations which would be thought of as paraphrases are
The Living Bible and
The Message.
Pedagogy
In
pedagogy, the creation of a paraphrase has been a student exercise since the
medieval period in
rhetoric. Students were required to write paraphrases of classical set pieces.
Characteristics of a well-done paraphrase
- It is not a summary.
- It does not contain words or phrases from the original (plagiarism).
- It includes all minor details from original.
- The meaning of the writing being paraphrased is clearer to the reader than in the original text.
- It restates the thesis.
- It is usually as long as, or longer than, the original.
Rhetoric
Parafráze | Paraphrase | Parafrazo | Parafrasi | Parafrase | Parafraza | Parafras