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“recapitulated”
recapitulate (verb), recapitulates; recapitulated; recapitulating
1. To summarize the main ideas: When the professor had finished his lecture, a student recapitulated the talk in a few words.
2. To repeat briefly: The speaker was told that his point was understood and that it was not necessary to recapitulate anything.
3. Etymology: from Latin recapitulare, "to sum up"; from re-, "again" + capitulare, "to draw up under headings"; from capitulum, "little head", "chapter"; from caput, "head".
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2. To repeat briefly: The speaker was told that his point was understood and that it was not necessary to recapitulate anything.
3. Etymology: from Latin recapitulare, "to sum up"; from re-, "again" + capitulare, "to draw up under headings"; from capitulum, "little head", "chapter"; from caput, "head".
Go to this Word A Day Revisited Index
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This entry is located in the following units:
capit-, capt-, cap-, cep-, ceps-, chapt-, chef, cip-
(page 5)
re-, red-
(page 1)
recapitulated (adjective)
A reference to a summary that is a repetition or brief re-statement of a longer discussion or document: "Joseph wrote a recapitulated statement that was in a newspaper column."
This entry is located in the following unit:
capit-, capt-, cap-, cep-, ceps-, chapt-, chef, cip-
(page 5)
Word Entries at Get Words:
“recapitulated”
To summarize the main ideas; to briefly repeat or to restate something. (1)
This entry is located in the following unit:
Word a Day Revisited Index of Cartoons Illustrating the Meanings of Words
(page 68)