Paraphrase
We tend to rewrite words and formulate phrases to improve our research work. Revising requires redoing, whilst editing means making minimum or slight changes to improve words standard, to avoid making huge modifications to the content. We edit by finding ways to enhance our research work by expressing our work more clearly and explanatory, it’s also help us delete irrelevant words or sentences and choosing our word choices to avoid recurrence. It also means making corrections to fragmented sentences that are not corrected or incomplete, as well as correcting mistakes in grammar, punctuations and spellings. (Ellison, 2010, p.145)
Summary
Editing helps finding ways to improve our research work, and enhance our research by stating things more clearly, by deleting and making corrections to fragmented sentences, gramma mistakes, punctuation and spelling mistakes.
References (Harvard style):
Ellison, C. (2010) McGraw-Hill’s concise guide to writing research papers, New York:
McGraw-Hill Online. Available at:
http://create.mheducation.com/createonline/index.html#preview (Accessed: 12 April
2017)
References (APA style):
Ellison, C. (2010). McGraw-Hill’s concise guide to writing research papers. New York:
McGraw-Hill. Retrieved from
http://create.mheducation.com/createonline/index.html#preview
References (Oscola style):
Ellison C, McGraw-Hill’s concise guide to writing research papers (McGraw-Hill 2010)
<http://create.mheducation.com/createonline/index.html#preview> accessed April 12, 2017