caption
To add captions to a text or illustration.
Noun
- The descriptive heading or title, of a document or part thereof.
- A title or brief explanation attached to an illustration, cartoon, user interface element, etc.
- Some of the photographs are new and interesting, but many captions are amateurish, uninformative or simply careless. - 1964 September, “New Books: The History of Railways. By Erwin Berghaus. Barrie & Rockcliff. 35s.”,...
- A piece of text appearing on screen as a subtitle or other part of a film or broadcast, describing dialogue (and sometimes other sound) for viewers who cannot hear.
- (theater, performance production) By analogy, text in a similar system used in a performance venue for transcription of a live event.
- The section on an official paper (for example, as part of a seizure or capture) that describes when, where, and what was taken, found or executed, and who authorized the act.
- A seizure or capture, especially of tangible property (chattel).
- 1919 Thomas Welburn Hughes. A treatise on criminal law and procedure. The Bobbs-Merril Co., Indianapolis, IN, USA. Sec. 557 (p. 378). The caption and asportation must be felonious.
- A story that is embedded in a pre-existing image (sometimes with image manipulation)
Origin
Borrowed from Latin captiō (“deception, fraud”), from the past participle of capiō (“to take, to seize”) (English capture). Compare Middle English capcioun (“seizure, capture”).
Forms
Related
captious captivate captive capture manipper subtitle supertitle surtitle
Derived
captionable captioned captioner captioning closed caption closed-caption closed captions closed captioned closed-captioned close captioned close-captioned closed captioning closed-captioning open caption open-caption open captions real time caption real-time caption real time captioning real-time captioning captionless encaption miscaption recaption
Verb
- To add captions to a text or illustration.
- Only once the drawing is done will the letterer caption it.
- To add captions to a film or broadcast.