| censorship |
broadly, any government restrictions on speech or writing; more precisely, government restrictions on forms of expression before they are disseminated
Ãâó: www.imuna.org/c2c/app_a.html
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| censor |
An official appointed every four, later five, years to maintain the census of citizens and senators
Ãâó: www.romans-in-britain.org.uk/glo_glossary_c.htm
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| censorship |
Action taken to prevent others from having access to a book or information; a public objection to words, subjects and/or information in books, films, and other media with the idea of depriving others from reading or viewing them.
Ãâó: www.odl.state.ok.us/servlibs/l-files/glossc.htm
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| censorship |
A film for theatrical release is reviewed by a film classification board which may request certain changes before release will be allowed, or allowed under a certain age rating.
Ãâó: www.soyouwannasellascript.com/source/glossary.cfm
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| censorship |
the means of keeping unpleasant (or unsociable) desires out of consciousness. Censorship is circumvented through dreams, parapraxes (or "slips of the tongue"), word association, and figures of speech.
Ãâó: www.geneseo.edu/~easton/humanities/Freud.htm
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