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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
summary
I.noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
summary execution (=one that is done immediately, without a trial or any legal process)
▪ Protestors face summary execution.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
brief
▪ These objectives and a brief summary of the main tasks are given below.
▪ What kind of answers, in briefest possible summary, were they suggesting?
▪ This may be a brief summary of reasons or a full decision dictated by the chairman.
▪ But in this brief summary we have to choose; and we choose the testimony of the novel for two reasons.
▪ Each one of perhaps a group of four should prepare a brief summary of an article of general interest.
▪ A brief summary is in order for those of you not inclined to keep track of shenanigans and other assorted tomfoolery.
▪ But any brief lay summary runs the risk of getting things wrong.
▪ Coleman also gave brief summaries of how each supervisor has done with regard to youth issues.
following
▪ A clearer demarcation might be drawn between the traditional subject headings lists and thesauri by the following summary of differences: 1.
▪ The following summary of nursing responsibilities for the care of surgical patients may appear complex at first glance and impossible to remember.
▪ If so, he or she should read the following summary of Section 2.
▪ The following case summary illustrates a situation where this was necessary.
▪ The following is a summary of the content of the course.
short
▪ An abstract is a short summary of content.
▪ It provides a short summary of the main event of the story, although in itself does not constitute a narrative.
▪ A short summary of what you regard as your strong points makes an excellent final paragraph to distinguish you from other candidates.
▪ They provide you with a short summary of the context to help you assess the tone of the extract.
▪ Epithets can be abusive: You clumsy fool! epitome A short summary of a speech or book.
useful
▪ Ratios can provide useful summaries of relative efficiency or progress.
▪ That can be studied, if necessary in the useful summary supplied by Emile Leonard.
▪ Hart's Book selection and use in academic libraries provides a useful summary of recent literature.
▪ Gilder's literature survey contains a useful summary of information on the costs of relegation and various types of storage.
■ VERB
contain
▪ Gilder's literature survey contains a useful summary of information on the costs of relegation and various types of storage.
▪ When they were done, Charles Aanded Stark an account book containing a summary of the last two months' transactions.
give
▪ Lloyd George gave only a summary of the letter and stressed its Liberal contents.
▪ In this introduction I have tried to give more than a summary.
▪ The report gave a brief summary of the afternoon when the Phoenix Dance Company visited our school.
▪ Maybe I can give you a better summary of that in December.
▪ B2 is a precis, giving only a summary of the original.
▪ Coleman also gave brief summaries of how each supervisor has done with regard to youth issues.
▪ Results Table I gives a summary of the results for endoscopic and symptomatic success.
▪ All I shall do at this stage is to give a summary of how I see effective religious education.
include
▪ Also included are summaries which discuss particular experiences from many areas of the voluntary sector.
▪ This six-part report includes an executive summary followed by an analysis of prospects and limitations of the technology.
▪ These outline specifications have been included to provide a summary of the new awards.
produce
▪ This project will finalise that collation and produce a summary document for use by policy makers and practitioners.
▪ In addition to a highly technical assessment document, there is a duty to produce a summary that the public can read.
provide
▪ Ratios can provide useful summaries of relative efficiency or progress.
▪ Table 4. 2 provides a summary of the services offered by national level ISPs.
▪ Chapter 8 provides a summary of the findings from the previous chapters and draws conclusions.
▪ Table 5.5 provides a summary of the results.
▪ These outline specifications have been included to provide a summary of the new awards.
▪ It provides a short summary of the main event of the story, although in itself does not constitute a narrative.
▪ These two paragraphs provide a fairly bald summary of the legal position.
▪ Hart's Book selection and use in academic libraries provides a useful summary of recent literature.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ "The progress we hoped for has clearly not developed," the council said in the summary to its final report.
▪ I've made a summary of the main points in the Secretary General's speech.
▪ In its report on the speech, the radio carried a brief summary, but did not broadcast the whole thing.
▪ There will be a news summary at 9.05.
▪ Write a two-page summary of the results of your research.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ As summaries go, this one does its job.
▪ As you go through the process, a summary of where you stand is available at the click of a mouse.
▪ But in this brief summary we have to choose; and we choose the testimony of the novel for two reasons.
▪ Each one of perhaps a group of four should prepare a brief summary of an article of general interest.
▪ I ask to see this summary.
▪ Stephen Pople's books are summaries of the science course up to Year 9, and are good reference books.
▪ The results of the Survey are presented in three sections, each of which begins with a summary of its major findings.
II.adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
conviction
▪ The penalty on summary conviction is a fine of up to £5,000.
▪ On summary conviction, the statutory maximum penalty is six months imprisonment, with a fine of up to £1000.
▪ The maximum fine, on summary conviction, for certain offences is £2,000.
execution
▪ Their leaders outside the jails issue orders that have to be obeyed on pain of summary execution.
▪ The conservatives and their newspapers took this occasion to denounce Arista for the summary execution of a political offender.
▪ Further macabre details of summary executions, including the use of dynamite to dismember prisoners, are expected to be released soon.
▪ The results were fairly similar to 1967: two summary executions and one piece of major surgery.
▪ Much ill-feeling was vented out on former collaborators, many of whom faced summary execution before government authority was fully established.
form
▪ Further examples were provided in summary form in Chapter 6.
judgment
▪ The Crown was thus entitled to the summary judgment.
▪ Woods has moved to dismiss the case, while Steiger has moved for summary judgment.
report
▪ It interprets the data and provides summary reports to the client running the program.
▪ In the classroom the groups are at work writing a summary report on the area.
▪ The summary report included no quantitative measurements.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Section 24 provides for a power of summary arrest in respect of arrestable offences as defined in that section.
▪ Were students satisfied with this summary justice?
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Summary

Summary \Sum"ma*ry\, a. [Cf. F. sommaire. See Sum.]

  1. Formed into a sum; summed up; reduced into a narrow compass, or into few words; short; brief; concise; compendious; as, a summary statement of facts.

  2. Hence, rapidly performed; quickly executed; as, a summary process; to take summary vengeance.

    Syn: Short; brief; concise; compendious; succinct.

Summary

Summary \Sum"ma*ry\, n.; pl. Summaries. [F. sommaire, or L. summarium. See Summary, a.] A general or comprehensive statement; an abridged account; an abstract, abridgment, or compendium, containing the sum or substance of a fuller account.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
summary

early 15c., "brief, abbreviated; containing the sum or substance only," from Medieval Latin summarius "of or pertaining to the sum or substance," from Latin summa "whole, totality, gist" (see sum (n.)). Compare Latin phrase ad summam "on the whole, generally, in short." Sense of "done promptly, performed without hesitation or formality" is from 1713.

summary

"a summary statement or account," c.1500, from Latin summarium "an epitome, abstract, summary," from summa "totality, gist" (see sum (n.)).

Wiktionary
summary

a. 1 concise, brief or presented in a condensed form 2 perform speedily and without formal ceremony. 3 (context legal English) Performed by cutting the procedures of a standard and fair trial. n. An abstract or a condensed presentation of the substance of a body of material.

WordNet
summary
  1. adj. performed speedily and without formality; "a summary execution"; "summary justice" [syn: drumhead]

  2. briefly giving the gist of something; "a short and compendious book"; "a compact style is brief and pithy"; "succinct comparisons"; "a summary formulation of a wide-ranging subject" [syn: compendious, compact, succinct]

summary

n. a briefstatement that presents the main points in a concise form; "he gave a summary of the conclusions"

Wikipedia
Summary

Summary may refer to:

  • Abstract (summary), shortening a passage or a write-up without changing its meaning but by using different words and sentences
  • Abridgement, the act of reducing a written work, typically a book, into a shorter form
  • Executive summary, a short document or section of a document, produced for business purposes, that summarizes a longer report or proposal or a group of related reports, in such a way that readers can rapidly become acquainted with a large body of material without having to read it all
  • Summary (law), which has several meanings in law
  • Automatic summarization, the use of a computer program to produce an abstract or abridgement
Summary (law)

Summary, in law, forms many compounds as an adjective meaning "short, concise":

  • Summary abatement, the abatement of a nuisance without judicial proceeding, even without notice or hearing, often by a destruction of the offending thing or structure. 39 Am J1st Nuis § 183 et seq.
  • Summary contempt proceeding, a proceeding to adjudicate contempt in the immediate presence of the court, without pleading, affidavit, or formal charges—albeit the accused may be entitled to a hearing or at least opportunity to make an explanation of his conduct under oath. 17 Am J2d Contpt §§ 86-88.
  • Summary conviction, convicting an accused without giving him the benefit of a trial.
  • summary court-martial, the lowest in the rank of courts-martial, conducted before one commissioned officer, limited in jurisdiction to offenses of a minor or petty nature of which enlisted men, not commissioned officers, stand accused.
  • Summary dismissal, a dismissal of a civil service employee without giving him opportunity to defend himself or a hearing of any kind. Anno: 131 ALR 396.
  • Summary forfeiture, a forfeiture to the state of property without giving the owner opportunity to be heard. Anno: 17 ALR 574.
  • Summary execution, an execution in which a person is accused of a crime and then immediately killed without benefit of a full and fair trial.
  • Summary judgment
    1. A judgment in a summary proceeding, as one rendered pursuant to statute against the sureties on a bond furnished in an action. 50 Am J1st Suret § 209. A judgment in certain actions specified in the statute providing the remedy, rendered upon plaintiff's motion, usually with supporting affidavits, upon the failure of the defendant to controvert the motion by filing an affidavit of defense or his failure to file an affidavit of defense or affidavit of merits sufficient to show the existence of a genuine issue of fact. 41 Am J1st Pl § 340.
    2. A motion for summary judgment is not a trial; on the contrary it assumes that scrutiny of the facts will disclose that the issues presented by the pleadings need not be tried because they are so patently insubstantial as not to be genuine issues at all. Consequently, as soon as it appears upon such a motion that there is really something to "try," the judge must at once deny it and let the cause take its course in the usual way. Cohen v Eleven West 42nd Street (CA2 NY) 115 F2d 531.
  • Summary jurisdiction, a jurisdiction exercised by summary proceedings, as in a bankruptcy court. 9 Am J2d Bankr § 68.
  • Summary jury trial, an alternative dispute resolution technique, increasingly being used in civil disputes in the United States
  • Summary offence, a crime in some common law jurisdictions that can be proceeded against summarily, without the right to a jury trial and/or indictment. Typically minor or petty offenses.
  • Summary order, a decision without an opinion explaining the decision.
  • Summary possessory proceeding ( summary process), a proceeding, summary in character, to which a landlord may resort for the recovery or possession of leased premises when he becomes entitled to possession. 32 Am J1st L & T § 1016.
  • Summary proceeding.
    1. A proceeding by which a controversy is settled, case disposed of, or trial conducted in a prompt, simple manner without the aid of a jury and without observance of requirements which prevail in a plenary action in reference to commencement of action, service of papers, etc. Western & A. R. Co. v Atlanta, 113 Ga 537, 38 SE 996. A proceeding in the Bankruptcy Court upon petition and answer at a day set for hearing upon notice or order to show cause against the relief proposed. 9 Am J2d Bankr § 69. A proceeding before an administrative body, requiring notice and hearing, but not requiring a full compliance with the rules governing trials of civil actions. Emerson v Hughes, 117 Vt 270, 90 A2d 910, 34 ALR2d 539.
    2. Summary proceedings are not conducted without proper investigation of the facts, or without notice, or an opportunity to be heard by the person alleged to have committed the acts, or whose property is sought to be affected. The term summary proceedings is also applied to proceedings which are taken lawfully, but without resort to the courts, such as the physical abatement of a nuisance, or the recaption of goods. Western & Atlantic Railroad Co. v Atlanta, 113 Ga 537, 38 SE 996.
  • Summary trial, a trial of a person on a criminal charge, without a jury. A trial in a summary proceeding.

Usage examples of "summary".

Phalaris, manner of bending--Results of the exclusion of light from their tips--Effects transmitted beneath the surface of the ground--Lateral illumination of the tip determines the direction of the curvature of the base--Cotyledons of Avena, curvature of basal part due to the illumination of upper part--Similar results with the hypocotyls of Brassica and Beta--Radicles of Sinapis apheliotropic, due to the sensitiveness of their tips--Concluding remarks and summary of chapter--Means by which circumnutation has been converted into heliotropism or apheliotropism.

Chapter VII Instinct Instincts comparable with habits, but different in their origin -- Instincts graduated -- Aphides and ants -- Instincts variable -- Domestic instincts, their origin -- Natural instincts of the cuckoo, ostrich, and parasitic bees -- Slave-making ants -- Hive-bee, its cell-making instinct - - Difficulties on the theory of the Natural Selection of instincts -- Neuter or sterile insects -- Summary.

Once there, the pain he was in, added to the disorder occasioned in his brain by the five leaders, caused him to give forth a summary of their contents, while Blink pressed his knees with her chin whenever the rising of his voice betokened too great absorption, as was her wont when she wanted him to feed her.

What we know of the Titans is drawn from short summaries in the Theogany of Hesiod and the Bibliotheca of Apollodorus, and from brief references that must be sifted from works devoted to other, often nonmythological subjects.

You are aware, since you sent her, that Carol Endermann spent the last weekend in Centennial advising me of your gratification that the work was going so well and of your disappointment that I was sending you too few scintillating quotes and summary generalizations.

In summary, if the rifle was located by clairvoyance, the search may well have been unconstitutional in analogy to wiretapping.

Each projectile point we subjected to rigorous examination and recording, drawing each projectile point on a special form and recording its catalog number along with a summary of a host of other information regarding where it was found and its curatorial history.

Summary: Derk, an unconventional wizard, and his magical family become involved in a plan to put a stop to the devastating tours of their world arranged by the tyrannical Mr.

He gave her what she needed with the crisp exactitude of a council summary.

SUMMARY: The Gith Demon transports each sister into a world created by their own desires.

As near as I could make out from the news summaries, these Hilder people are a minority.

Chapter VIII Hybridism Distinction between the sterility of first crosses and of hybrids -- Sterility various in degree, not universal, affected by close interbreeding, removed by domestication -- Laws governing the sterility of hybrids -- Sterility not a special endowment, but incidental on other differences -- Causes of the sterility of first crosses and of hybrids -- Parallelism between the effects of changed conditions of life and crossing -- Fertility of varieties when crossed and of their mongrel offspring not universal -- Hybrids and mongrels compared independently of their fertility -- Summary.

A completely different picture of a Numen than Jay had gotten from the absorption of the manual summary.

She then sketched a bare-bones summary of the Bubble culture, with its hunters, patchers, archives, and shifting shortages of men.

Julian Hammond reported to Celia with a summary of media attention to Peptide 7.