According to the Oxford English Dictionary, editor comes from the Latin phrase e ditus which means "to put forward". The editor ludorum in Ancient Rome was the person who put on the games. In French, editeur means "publisher". The word came into English from French. The verb edit is a back formation from editor.
Publications
Human editors in the print publishing industry include people who are responsible for:
organizing and publishing a magazine —. The top editor may be called editor-in-chief.
producing a definitive edition of a classic author's works — a scholarly editor.
organizing and managing contributions to a multi-author book — symposium editor or volume editor.
finding marketable ideas and presenting them to appropriate authors — a sponsoring editor.
obtaining copy or recruiting authors — such as the acquisitions editor or commissioning editor for a publishing house.
improving an author's writing so that they indeed say what they want to say, in an effective manner — a substantive editor. Depending on the writer's skill, this editing can sometimes turn into ghost writing. Substantive editing is seldom a title. Many types of editors do this type of work.
Assistant editors and production assistants perform preliminary screening and logging of motion picture footage; senior editors are responsible for creative placement of scenes and shots, structural placement of major elements and organization of the entire presentation.
These editors construct tracks consisting of assembled pre-recorded dialogue, the audio mixing in of sound effects, foley and music to achieve the desired effect for the motion pictures and television programs.
The executive editor sets the publicationstandards for performance, and is responsible for assuring the highest standards of ethical conduct in the process of gathering and presenting information, as well as for motivating and developing the staff.
Fairfax editor of metropolitan newspapers Mark Scott said that although there had been several strong candidates for the job, Mr Jaspan had immediately impressed the selection panel,
As journalists and editors I think we need to think very carefully about how we attract new readers, and particularly younger people," he said.
Fairfax chief executive Fred Hilmer said Mr Jaspan would become part of Fairfax's executive management team, allowing him to promote the interests of The Age and its readers more directly.