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Meaning of annotation in English

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  • The new translation of the Latin work includes extensive annotation by scholars .
  • It's a book that cries out for annotation.
  • The program is designed for annotation of images .
  • There is an easy-to-use facility in the program for adding annotations to your document .
  • creative writing
  • intertextual
  • intertextuality
  • intertextually
  • self-portrait
  • uncaptioned
  • versification

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Translations of annotation

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an·no·ta·tion

An•no•ta•tion.

  • acknowledgment
  • expanding upon
  • anniversary day
  • Anniversary week
  • anno Domini
  • anno Hebraico
  • anno Hegirae
  • anno urbis conditae
  • annomination
  • Annona cherimola
  • Annona diversifolia
  • Annona glabra
  • Annona muricata
  • Annona reticulata
  • Annona squamosa
  • annotated print
  • Annotationist
  • announcement
  • Annual epact
  • annual fern
  • annual general meeting
  • annual parallax
  • annual percentage rate
  • ANNotated Ada
  • Annotated Case Report Form
  • annotated diagram
  • annotated DNA sequence
  • Annotated Electrocardiogram
  • Annotated Error Guide
  • annotated genome sequence
  • annotated genomic sequence
  • Annotated Grateful Dead Lyrics
  • Annotated Instructor's Edition
  • Annotated Labeled Transition System
  • Annotated Multiple Choice Questions
  • Annotated Outline
  • annotated photograph
  • Annotated Points-to Escape
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  • Annotated XML Schema
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  • Annotation DataSet Record
  • Annotation Operator Graph
  • annotation overprint
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  • Annotation, Interpretation and Management of Mutations
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Definition of annotate

intransitive verb

transitive verb

Examples of annotate in a Sentence

These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'annotate.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

Word History

Latin annotatus , past participle of annotare , from ad- + notare to mark — more at note

1693, in the meaning defined at transitive sense

Dictionary Entries Near annotate

Cite this entry.

“Annotate.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary , Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/annotate. Accessed 2 Apr. 2024.

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annotation meaning in english

How to Annotate Texts

Use the links below to jump directly to any section of this guide:

Annotation Fundamentals

How to start annotating , how to annotate digital texts, how to annotate a textbook, how to annotate a scholarly article or book, how to annotate literature, how to annotate images, videos, and performances, additional resources for teachers.

Writing in your books can make you smarter. Or, at least (according to education experts), annotation–an umbrella term for underlining, highlighting, circling, and, most importantly, leaving comments in the margins–helps students to remember and comprehend what they read. Annotation is like a conversation between reader and text. Proper annotation allows students to record their own opinions and reactions, which can serve as the inspiration for research questions and theses. So, whether you're reading a novel, poem, news article, or science textbook, taking notes along the way can give you an advantage in preparing for tests or writing essays. This guide contains resources that explain the benefits of annotating texts, provide annotation tools, and suggest approaches for diverse kinds of texts; the last section includes lesson plans and exercises for teachers.

Why annotate? As the resources below explain, annotation allows students to emphasize connections to material covered elsewhere in the text (or in other texts), material covered previously in the course, or material covered in lectures and discussion. In other words, proper annotation is an organizing tool and a time saver. The links in this section will introduce you to the theory, practice, and purpose of annotation. 

How to Mark a Book, by Mortimer Adler

This famous, charming essay lays out the case for marking up books, and provides practical suggestions at the end including underlining, highlighting, circling key words, using vertical lines to mark shifts in tone/subject, numbering points in an argument, and keeping track of questions that occur to you as you read. 

How Annotation Reshapes Student Thinking (TeacherHUB)

In this article, a high school teacher discusses the importance of annotation and how annotation encourages more effective critical thinking.

The Future of Annotation (Journal of Business and Technical Communication)

This scholarly article summarizes research on the benefits of annotation in the classroom and in business. It also discusses how technology and digital texts might affect the future of annotation. 

Annotating to Deepen Understanding (Texas Education Agency)

This website provides another introduction to annotation (designed for 11th graders). It includes a helpful section that teaches students how to annotate reading comprehension passages on tests.

Once you understand what annotation is, you're ready to begin. But what tools do you need? How do you prepare? The resources linked in this section list strategies and techniques you can use to start annotating. 

What is Annotating? (Charleston County School District)

This resource gives an overview of annotation styles, including useful shorthands and symbols. This is a good place for a student who has never annotated before to begin.

How to Annotate Text While Reading (YouTube)

This video tutorial (appropriate for grades 6–10) explains the basic ins and outs of annotation and gives examples of the type of information students should be looking for.

Annotation Practices: Reading a Play-text vs. Watching Film (U Calgary)

This blog post, written by a student, talks about how the goals and approaches of annotation might change depending on the type of text or performance being observed. 

Annotating Texts with Sticky Notes (Lyndhurst Schools)

Sometimes students are asked to annotate books they don't own or can't write in for other reasons. This resource provides some strategies for using sticky notes instead.

Teaching Students to Close Read...When You Can't Mark the Text (Performing in Education)

Here, a sixth grade teacher demonstrates the strategies she uses for getting her students to annotate with sticky notes. This resource includes a link to the teacher's free Annotation Bookmark (via Teachers Pay Teachers).

Digital texts can present a special challenge when it comes to annotation; emerging research suggests that many students struggle to critically read and retain information from digital texts. However, proper annotation can solve the problem. This section contains links to the most highly-utilized platforms for electronic annotation.

Evernote is one of the two big players in the "digital annotation apps" game. In addition to allowing users to annotate digital documents, the service (for a fee) allows users to group multiple formats (PDF, webpages, scanned hand-written notes) into separate notebooks, create voice recordings, and sync across all sorts of devices. 

OneNote is Evernote's main competitor. Reviews suggest that OneNote allows for more freedom for digital note-taking than Evernote, but that it is slightly more awkward to import and annotate a PDF, especially on certain platforms. However, OneNote's free version is slightly more feature-filled, and OneNote allows you to link your notes to time stamps on an audio recording.

Diigo is a basic browser extension that allows a user to annotate webpages. Diigo also offers a Screenshot app that allows for direct saving to Google Drive.

While the creators of Hypothesis like to focus on their app's social dimension, students are more likely to be interested in the private highlighting and annotating functions of this program.

Foxit PDF Reader

Foxit is one of the leading PDF readers. Though the full suite must be purchased, Foxit offers a number of annotation and highlighting tools for free.

Nitro PDF Reader

This is another well-reviewed, free PDF reader that includes annotation and highlighting. Annotation, text editing, and other tools are included in the free version.

Goodreader is a very popular Mac-only app that includes annotation and editing tools for PDFs, Word documents, Powerpoint, and other formats.

Although textbooks have vocabulary lists, summaries, and other features to emphasize important material, annotation can allow students to process information and discover their own connections. This section links to guides and video tutorials that introduce you to textbook annotation. 

Annotating Textbooks (Niagara University)

This PDF provides a basic introduction as well as strategies including focusing on main ideas, working by section or chapter, annotating in your own words, and turning section headings into questions.

A Simple Guide to Text Annotation (Catawba College)

The simple, practical strategies laid out in this step-by-step guide will help students learn how to break down chapters in their textbooks using main ideas, definitions, lists, summaries, and potential test questions.

Annotating (Mercer Community College)

This packet, an excerpt from a literature textbook, provides a short exercise and some examples of how to do textbook annotation, including using shorthand and symbols.

Reading Your Healthcare Textbook: Annotation (Saddleback College)

This powerpoint contains a number of helpful suggestions, especially for students who are new to annotation. It emphasizes limited highlighting, lots of student writing, and using key words to find the most important information in a textbook. Despite the title, it is useful to a student in any discipline.

Annotating a Textbook (Excelsior College OWL)

This video (with included transcript) discusses how to use textbook features like boxes and sidebars to help guide annotation. It's an extremely helpful, detailed discussion of how textbooks are organized.

Because scholarly articles and books have complex arguments and often depend on technical vocabulary, they present particular challenges for an annotating student. The resources in this section help students get to the heart of scholarly texts in order to annotate and, by extension, understand the reading.

Annotating a Text (Hunter College)

This resource is designed for college students and shows how to annotate a scholarly article using highlighting, paraphrase, a descriptive outline, and a two-margin approach. It ends with a sample passage marked up using the strategies provided. 

Guide to Annotating the Scholarly Article (ReadWriteThink.org)

This is an effective introduction to annotating scholarly articles across all disciplines. This resource encourages students to break down how the article uses primary and secondary sources and to annotate the types of arguments and persuasive strategies (synthesis, analysis, compare/contrast).

How to Highlight and Annotate Your Research Articles (CHHS Media Center)

This video, developed by a high school media specialist, provides an effective beginner-level introduction to annotating research articles. 

How to Read a Scholarly Book (AndrewJacobs.org)

In this essay, a college professor lets readers in on the secrets of scholarly monographs. Though he does not discuss annotation, he explains how to find a scholarly book's thesis, methodology, and often even a brief literature review in the introduction. This is a key place for students to focus when creating annotations. 

A 5-step Approach to Reading Scholarly Literature and Taking Notes (Heather Young Leslie)

This resource, written by a professor of anthropology, is an even more comprehensive and detailed guide to reading scholarly literature. Combining the annotation techniques above with the reading strategy here allows students to process scholarly book efficiently. 

Annotation is also an important part of close reading works of literature. Annotating helps students recognize symbolism, double meanings, and other literary devices. These resources provide additional guidelines on annotating literature.

AP English Language Annotation Guide (YouTube)

In this ~10 minute video, an AP Language teacher provides tips and suggestions for using annotations to point out rhetorical strategies and other important information.

Annotating Text Lesson (YouTube)

In this video tutorial, an English teacher shows how she uses the white board to guide students through annotation and close reading. This resource uses an in-depth example to model annotation step-by-step.

Close Reading a Text and Avoiding Pitfalls (Purdue OWL)

This resources demonstrates how annotation is a central part of a solid close reading strategy; it also lists common mistakes to avoid in the annotation process.

AP Literature Assignment: Annotating Literature (Mount Notre Dame H.S.)

This brief assignment sheet contains suggestions for what to annotate in a novel, including building connections between parts of the book, among multiple books you are reading/have read, and between the book and your own experience. It also includes samples of quality annotations.

AP Handout: Annotation Guide (Covington Catholic H.S.)

This annotation guide shows how to keep track of symbolism, figurative language, and other devices in a novel using a highlighter, a pencil, and every part of a book (including the front and back covers).

In addition to written resources, it's possible to annotate visual "texts" like theatrical performances, movies, sculptures, and paintings. Taking notes on visual texts allows students to recall details after viewing a resource which, unlike a book, can't be re-read or re-visited ( for example, a play that has finished its run, or an art exhibition that is far away). These resources draw attention to the special questions and techniques that students should use when dealing with visual texts.

How to Take Notes on Videos (U of Southern California)

This resource is a good place to start for a student who has never had to take notes on film before. It briefly outlines three general approaches to note-taking on a film. 

How to Analyze a Movie, Step-by-Step (San Diego Film Festival)

This detailed guide provides lots of tips for film criticism and analysis. It contains a list of specific questions to ask with respect to plot, character development, direction, musical score, cinematography, special effects, and more. 

How to "Read" a Film (UPenn)

This resource provides an academic perspective on the art of annotating and analyzing a film. Like other resources, it provides students a checklist of things to watch out for as they watch the film.

Art Annotation Guide (Gosford Hill School)

This resource focuses on how to annotate a piece of art with respect to its formal elements like line, tone, mood, and composition. It contains a number of helpful questions and relevant examples. 

Photography Annotation (Arts at Trinity)

This resource is designed specifically for photography students. Like some of the other resources on this list, it primarily focuses on formal elements, but also shows students how to integrate the specific technical vocabulary of modern photography. This resource also contains a number of helpful sample annotations.

How to Review a Play (U of Wisconsin)

This resource from the University of Wisconsin Writing Center is designed to help students write a review of a play. It contains suggested questions for students to keep in mind as they watch a given production. This resource helps students think about staging, props, script alterations, and many other key elements of a performance.

This section contains links to lessons plans and exercises suitable for high school and college instructors.

Beyond the Yellow Highlighter: Teaching Annotation Skills to Improve Reading Comprehension (English Journal)

In this journal article, a high school teacher talks about her approach to teaching annotation. This article makes a clear distinction between annotation and mere highlighting.

Lesson Plan for Teaching Annotation, Grades 9–12 (readwritethink.org)

This lesson plan, published by the National Council of Teachers of English, contains four complete lessons that help introduce high school students to annotation.

Teaching Theme Using Close Reading (Performing in Education)

This lesson plan was developed by a middle school teacher, and is aligned to Common Core. The teacher presents her strategies and resources in comprehensive fashion.

Analyzing a Speech Using Annotation (UNC-TV/PBS Learning Media)

This complete lesson plan, which includes a guide for the teacher and relevant handouts for students, will prepare students to analyze both the written and presentation components of a speech. This lesson plan is best for students in 6th–10th grade.

Writing to Learn History: Annotation and Mini-Writes (teachinghistory.org)

This teaching guide, developed for high school History classes, provides handouts and suggested exercises that can help students become more comfortable with annotating historical sources.

Writing About Art (The College Board)

This Prezi presentation is useful to any teacher introducing students to the basics of annotating art. The presentation covers annotating for both formal elements and historical/cultural significance.

Film Study Worksheets (TeachWithMovies.org)

This resource contains links to a general film study worksheet, as well as specific worksheets for novel adaptations, historical films, documentaries, and more. These resources are appropriate for advanced middle school students and some high school students. 

Annotation Practice Worksheet (La Guardia Community College)

This worksheet has a sample text and instructions for students to annotate it. It is a useful resource for teachers who want to give their students a chance to practice, but don't have the time to select an appropriate piece of text. 

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Definition of 'annotate'

IPA Pronunciation Guide

annotate in British English

Annotate in american english, examples of 'annotate' in a sentence annotate, cobuild collocations annotate, trends of annotate.

View usage for: All Years Last 10 years Last 50 years Last 100 years Last 300 years

In other languages annotate

  • American English : annotate / ˈænoʊteɪt /
  • Brazilian Portuguese : fazer anotações
  • Chinese : 为…做注释
  • European Spanish : anotar
  • French : annoter
  • German : kommentieren
  • Italian : annotare
  • Japanese : 注釈をつける
  • Korean : 주석을 달다
  • European Portuguese : fazer anotações
  • Latin American Spanish : anotar

Browse alphabetically annotate

  • annonaceous
  • annotatable
  • annotate text
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Definition of annotate verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

  • The drawings were all clearly annotated.
  • The text was annotated with her own comments.

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to supply with critical or explanatory notes ; comment upon in notes : to annotate the works of Shakespeare.

to make annotations or notes .

Origin of annotate

Other words from annotate.

  • an·no·ta·tive, an·no·ta·to·ry [ an - uh -tey-t uh -ree, -t uh -tawr-ee, -tohr-ee; uh - noh -t uh -tawr-ee, -tohr-ee], /ˈæn əˌteɪ tə ri, -təˌtɔr i, -ˌtoʊr i; əˈnoʊ təˌtɔr i, -ˌtoʊr i/, adjective
  • an·no·ta·tor, noun
  • o·ver·an·no·tate, verb, o·ver·an·no·tat·ed, o·ver·an·no·tat·ing.
  • re·an·no·tate, verb, re·an·no·tat·ed, re·an·no·tat·ing.

Words Nearby annotate

  • annonaceous
  • annona family
  • announcement

Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2024

How to use annotate in a sentence

An AI trained to recognize cancer from a slew of medical scans, annotated in yellow marker by a human doctor, could learn to associate “yellow” with “cancer.”

To make any sense of these images, and in turn, what the brain is doing, the parts of neurons have to be annotated in three dimensions, the result of which is a wiring diagram.

This kind of labeling and reconstruction is necessary to make sense of the vast datasets in connectomics, and have traditionally required armies of undergraduate students or citizen scientists to manually annotate all chunks.

Once a video is annotated with a topic, it is associated with IAB’s categories to be monetized.

You should annotate your reports to document these indexing bugs during the month of September through October 14th.

The latest $400 model has a reading light and a touch screen that allows you to annotate while reading.

Madame Beattie threw back her plumed head and laughed, the same laugh she had used to annotate the stories.

He read industriously for some time, occasionally pausing to annotate ; and once or twice he raised his head and listened.

He would annotate three hundred volumes for a page of facts.

To annotate it in detail would be to spoil its completeness.

His curiosity turning to admiration, he began to translate and annotate the most striking treatises that fell into his hands.

British Dictionary definitions for annotate

/ ( ˈænəʊˌteɪt , ˈænə- ) /

to supply (a written work, such as an ancient text) with critical or explanatory notes

Derived forms of annotate

  • annotatable , adjective
  • annotative , adjective
  • annotator , noun

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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annotation noun

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What does the noun annotation mean?

There are six meanings listed in OED's entry for the noun annotation , three of which are labelled obsolete. See ‘Meaning & use’ for definitions, usage, and quotation evidence.

annotation has developed meanings and uses in subjects including

How common is the noun annotation ?

How is the noun annotation pronounced, british english, u.s. english, where does the noun annotation come from.

Earliest known use

Middle English

The earliest known use of the noun annotation is in the Middle English period (1150—1500).

OED's earliest evidence for annotation is from before 1464, in the writing of John Capgrave, prior of Bishop's Lynn, theologian, and historian.

annotation is of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly a borrowing from Latin.

Etymons: French annotation ; Latin annotātiōn- , annotātiō .

Nearby entries

  • annomination, n. 1555–
  • annona, n. 1788–
  • annonary, adj. 1651–
  • annonce, n. 1775–
  • annophysial, adj. 1559
  • annorme, v. a1644
  • annosity, n. c1450–1699
  • annotatable, adj. 1898–
  • annotate, v. 1598–
  • annotated, adj. 1786–
  • annotation, n. a1464–
  • annotationist, n. 1664–
  • annotative, adj. 1796–
  • annotator, n. 1609–
  • annotatory, adj. 1836–
  • annote, v. 1449–
  • annoted, adj. 1776–
  • annotine, n. 1664
  • annotinous, adj. 1836–
  • announce, n. 1779–
  • announce, v. c1429–

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Meaning & use

Pronunciation, compounds & derived words, entry history for annotation, n..

annotation, n. was revised in June 2022.

annotation, n. was last modified in March 2024.

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  • further revisions to definitions, pronunciation, etymology, headwords, variant spellings, quotations, and dates;
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Revisions and additions of this kind were last incorporated into annotation, n. in March 2024.

Earlier versions of this entry were published in:

OED First Edition (1884)

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Citation details

Factsheet for annotation, n., browse entry.

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COMMENTS

  1. ANNOTATION

    ANNOTATION definition: 1. a short explanation or note added to a text or image, or the act of adding short explanations or…. Learn more.

  2. Annotation Definition & Meaning

    annotation: [noun] a note added by way of comment or explanation.

  3. ANNOTATION definition and meaning

    2 meanings: 1. the act of annotating 2. a note added in explanation, etc, esp of some literary work.... Click for more definitions.

  4. ANNOTATION Definition & Usage Examples

    Annotation definition: . See examples of ANNOTATION used in a sentence.

  5. annotation noun

    Definition of annotation noun from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. ... Take your English to the next level. The Oxford Learner's Thesaurus explains the difference between groups of similar words. Try it for free as part of the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary app.

  6. Annotation

    annotation: 1 n the act of adding notes Synonyms: annotating Type of: expanding upon , expansion adding information or detail n a comment or instruction (usually added) Synonyms: notation , note Types: show 7 types... hide 7 types... poste restante a notation written on mail that is to be held at the post office until called for (not in the ...

  7. ANNOTATION definition in American English

    annotation in American English. (ˌænəˈteiʃən) noun. 1. a critical or explanatory note or body of notes added to a text. 2. the act of annotating. 3. note (sense 1) Abbreviation: annot.

  8. Annotation Definition & Meaning

    Britannica Dictionary definition of ANNOTATION. 1. [count] : a note added to a text, book, drawing, etc., as a comment or explanation. Without the annotations, the diagram would be hard to understand. 2. [noncount] : the act of adding notes or comments to something : the act of annotating something. the author's annotation of the diagram.

  9. Annotation

    Define annotation. annotation synonyms, annotation pronunciation, annotation translation, English dictionary definition of annotation. n. 1. The act or process of furnishing critical commentary or explanatory notes. 2. A critical or explanatory note; a commentary. American Heritage®...

  10. Annotate Definition & Meaning

    annotate: [verb] to make or furnish critical or explanatory notes or comment.

  11. How to Annotate Texts

    Annotating a Text (Hunter College) This resource is designed for college students and shows how to annotate a scholarly article using highlighting, paraphrase, a descriptive outline, and a two-margin approach. It ends with a sample passage marked up using the strategies provided.

  12. ANNOTATE definition and meaning

    To supply (a written work, such as an ancient text) with critical or explanatory notes.... Click for English pronunciations, examples sentences, video.

  13. Annotate

    Annotate Definition. To annotate is to make notes on or mark up a text with one's thoughts, questions, or realizations while reading. The term annotation refers to the actual notes one has written ...

  14. annotate verb

    Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more. ... The drawings were all clearly annotated. ... Find out which words work together and produce more natural-sounding English with the Oxford Collocations Dictionary app. Try it for free as part of the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary app.

  15. ANNOTATE Definition & Usage Examples

    Annotate definition: to supply with critical or explanatory notes; comment upon in notes. See examples of ANNOTATE used in a sentence.

  16. Annotation Examples Simply Explained

    The inclusion of annotations can bring additional value and information to your work. Understand how to properly include these with annotation examples. ... publishers, or others may use annotations to give historical context, explain the meaning of a word, offer insights or highlight information. In this edition of The Art of War by Sun Tzu ...

  17. annotation, n. meanings, etymology and more

    What does the noun annotation mean? There are six meanings listed in OED's entry for the noun annotation, three of which are labelled obsolete. See 'Meaning & use' for definitions, usage, and quotation evidence. ... The earliest known use of the noun annotation is in the Middle English period (1150—1500). OED's earliest evidence for ...