Alternative word for “curated content”












1















I am a non-native English language speaker.

I have been using curated as the word to describe something that has been selected from a larger set. Today when I was writing an article, I looked up the word and it doesn't look like it is used a lot.



What alternatives I can use? For example, I'd like to using a word similar to curate in the following sentence:




Please select the best applications from all the ones that we've got.




Additional info from OP in comment:

The sentence is meant to be used on the internet as well as in general speaking. I meant to say select a subset from a larger set, maybe after careful examination. For eg, let's say there is a news app that shows me every news. But I only want to see specific news stories and not everything. So I would want the news app to the news stories before showing to me. Hope this clarifies.










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    I can't recall ever having heard curated used in that way in my 60+ years as a British English speaker.

    – TrevorD
    Jul 16 '16 at 18:12











  • @TrevorD I am from India, so we use British English too. What would you use then?

    – mahacoder
    Jul 16 '16 at 18:14











  • Please clarify what types of 'applications', 'collections', etc. you are referring to: computer programs (which is what I first thought of when reading "applications"); art; clothing; ... . In a comment below, you mention 'news stories' - what type of news? Where is your sentence to be used: in a journal; on the internet; ...?

    – TrevorD
    Jul 16 '16 at 18:26













  • @TrevorD The sentence is meant to be used on the internet as well as in general speaking. I meant to say select a subset from a larger set, maybe after careful examination. For eg, let's say there is a news app that shows me every news. But I only want to see specific news stories and not everything. So I would want the news app to <fill in the word here> the news stories before showing to me. Hope this clarifies.

    – mahacoder
    Jul 16 '16 at 19:08
















1















I am a non-native English language speaker.

I have been using curated as the word to describe something that has been selected from a larger set. Today when I was writing an article, I looked up the word and it doesn't look like it is used a lot.



What alternatives I can use? For example, I'd like to using a word similar to curate in the following sentence:




Please select the best applications from all the ones that we've got.




Additional info from OP in comment:

The sentence is meant to be used on the internet as well as in general speaking. I meant to say select a subset from a larger set, maybe after careful examination. For eg, let's say there is a news app that shows me every news. But I only want to see specific news stories and not everything. So I would want the news app to the news stories before showing to me. Hope this clarifies.










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    I can't recall ever having heard curated used in that way in my 60+ years as a British English speaker.

    – TrevorD
    Jul 16 '16 at 18:12











  • @TrevorD I am from India, so we use British English too. What would you use then?

    – mahacoder
    Jul 16 '16 at 18:14











  • Please clarify what types of 'applications', 'collections', etc. you are referring to: computer programs (which is what I first thought of when reading "applications"); art; clothing; ... . In a comment below, you mention 'news stories' - what type of news? Where is your sentence to be used: in a journal; on the internet; ...?

    – TrevorD
    Jul 16 '16 at 18:26













  • @TrevorD The sentence is meant to be used on the internet as well as in general speaking. I meant to say select a subset from a larger set, maybe after careful examination. For eg, let's say there is a news app that shows me every news. But I only want to see specific news stories and not everything. So I would want the news app to <fill in the word here> the news stories before showing to me. Hope this clarifies.

    – mahacoder
    Jul 16 '16 at 19:08














1












1








1








I am a non-native English language speaker.

I have been using curated as the word to describe something that has been selected from a larger set. Today when I was writing an article, I looked up the word and it doesn't look like it is used a lot.



What alternatives I can use? For example, I'd like to using a word similar to curate in the following sentence:




Please select the best applications from all the ones that we've got.




Additional info from OP in comment:

The sentence is meant to be used on the internet as well as in general speaking. I meant to say select a subset from a larger set, maybe after careful examination. For eg, let's say there is a news app that shows me every news. But I only want to see specific news stories and not everything. So I would want the news app to the news stories before showing to me. Hope this clarifies.










share|improve this question
















I am a non-native English language speaker.

I have been using curated as the word to describe something that has been selected from a larger set. Today when I was writing an article, I looked up the word and it doesn't look like it is used a lot.



What alternatives I can use? For example, I'd like to using a word similar to curate in the following sentence:




Please select the best applications from all the ones that we've got.




Additional info from OP in comment:

The sentence is meant to be used on the internet as well as in general speaking. I meant to say select a subset from a larger set, maybe after careful examination. For eg, let's say there is a news app that shows me every news. But I only want to see specific news stories and not everything. So I would want the news app to the news stories before showing to me. Hope this clarifies.







single-word-requests






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













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share|improve this question








edited Jul 16 '16 at 19:22









TrevorD

10.7k22457




10.7k22457










asked Jul 16 '16 at 7:36









mahacodermahacoder

140128




140128








  • 1





    I can't recall ever having heard curated used in that way in my 60+ years as a British English speaker.

    – TrevorD
    Jul 16 '16 at 18:12











  • @TrevorD I am from India, so we use British English too. What would you use then?

    – mahacoder
    Jul 16 '16 at 18:14











  • Please clarify what types of 'applications', 'collections', etc. you are referring to: computer programs (which is what I first thought of when reading "applications"); art; clothing; ... . In a comment below, you mention 'news stories' - what type of news? Where is your sentence to be used: in a journal; on the internet; ...?

    – TrevorD
    Jul 16 '16 at 18:26













  • @TrevorD The sentence is meant to be used on the internet as well as in general speaking. I meant to say select a subset from a larger set, maybe after careful examination. For eg, let's say there is a news app that shows me every news. But I only want to see specific news stories and not everything. So I would want the news app to <fill in the word here> the news stories before showing to me. Hope this clarifies.

    – mahacoder
    Jul 16 '16 at 19:08














  • 1





    I can't recall ever having heard curated used in that way in my 60+ years as a British English speaker.

    – TrevorD
    Jul 16 '16 at 18:12











  • @TrevorD I am from India, so we use British English too. What would you use then?

    – mahacoder
    Jul 16 '16 at 18:14











  • Please clarify what types of 'applications', 'collections', etc. you are referring to: computer programs (which is what I first thought of when reading "applications"); art; clothing; ... . In a comment below, you mention 'news stories' - what type of news? Where is your sentence to be used: in a journal; on the internet; ...?

    – TrevorD
    Jul 16 '16 at 18:26













  • @TrevorD The sentence is meant to be used on the internet as well as in general speaking. I meant to say select a subset from a larger set, maybe after careful examination. For eg, let's say there is a news app that shows me every news. But I only want to see specific news stories and not everything. So I would want the news app to <fill in the word here> the news stories before showing to me. Hope this clarifies.

    – mahacoder
    Jul 16 '16 at 19:08








1




1





I can't recall ever having heard curated used in that way in my 60+ years as a British English speaker.

– TrevorD
Jul 16 '16 at 18:12





I can't recall ever having heard curated used in that way in my 60+ years as a British English speaker.

– TrevorD
Jul 16 '16 at 18:12













@TrevorD I am from India, so we use British English too. What would you use then?

– mahacoder
Jul 16 '16 at 18:14





@TrevorD I am from India, so we use British English too. What would you use then?

– mahacoder
Jul 16 '16 at 18:14













Please clarify what types of 'applications', 'collections', etc. you are referring to: computer programs (which is what I first thought of when reading "applications"); art; clothing; ... . In a comment below, you mention 'news stories' - what type of news? Where is your sentence to be used: in a journal; on the internet; ...?

– TrevorD
Jul 16 '16 at 18:26







Please clarify what types of 'applications', 'collections', etc. you are referring to: computer programs (which is what I first thought of when reading "applications"); art; clothing; ... . In a comment below, you mention 'news stories' - what type of news? Where is your sentence to be used: in a journal; on the internet; ...?

– TrevorD
Jul 16 '16 at 18:26















@TrevorD The sentence is meant to be used on the internet as well as in general speaking. I meant to say select a subset from a larger set, maybe after careful examination. For eg, let's say there is a news app that shows me every news. But I only want to see specific news stories and not everything. So I would want the news app to <fill in the word here> the news stories before showing to me. Hope this clarifies.

– mahacoder
Jul 16 '16 at 19:08





@TrevorD The sentence is meant to be used on the internet as well as in general speaking. I meant to say select a subset from a larger set, maybe after careful examination. For eg, let's say there is a news app that shows me every news. But I only want to see specific news stories and not everything. So I would want the news app to <fill in the word here> the news stories before showing to me. Hope this clarifies.

– mahacoder
Jul 16 '16 at 19:08










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















3














Two dictionaries define the use of curate as a verb as follows:




curate Cambridge Dictionary:
verb [transitive]




  • to be in charge of selecting and caring for objects to be shown in a museum or to form part of a collection of art, an exhibition, etc.:
    She curated a recent exhibition of Indian artwork.

  • to be in charge of selecting films, performers, events, etc. to be included in a festival:
    a Messiaen festival curated by pianist Pierre-Laurent Aimard

  • to select things such as documents, music, products, or internet content to be included as part of a list or collection, or on a website:
    a curated library of short movies available online


curate Oxford Dictionary:
verb [with object]




  • Select, organize, and look after the items in (a collection or exhibition):
    both exhibitions are curated by the Centre’s director
    He has had ten years of museum experience curating exhibitions, commissioning new works, and developing artist residency programs.
    Plus, I am really excited to be guest curating a large exhibition from the museum's wonderful American Folk Art Collection.
    Over the past decade, my father has been slowly curating a collection of AIDS posters from all over the world, for the National Library of Medicine in Bethesda.


  • Select the performers or performances that will feature in (an arts event or programme):
    in past years the festival has been curated by the likes of David Bowie
    The Observer is media partner of this year's Meltdown festival, which is curated by Patti Smith.
    It's a great insane ending to a brilliantly curated day of music.
    The concert is part of this Meltdown Festival curated by Morrissey.


  • Select, organize, and present (online content, merchandise, information, etc.), typically using professional or expert knowledge:
    people not only want to connect when using a network but they also enjoy getting credit for sharing or curating information.

    (as adjective curated) a curated alternative to the world’s most popular video portal
    It's a curated platform with 225,000 apps.
    Mr Hirschorn said that people not only want to connect when using a network but they also enjoy getting credit for sharing or curating information.
    It appears that consumers like the integrated, curated systems and platforms that Apple has created.





Personally, I've only previously come across the use of curated in connection with art or historical artifacts (e.g. in a museum), but it's clear that it can be used in connection with lists or collections on the internet.



It's also clear, however, that it's only used in connection with collections of items that have been individually selected — one might have said 'hand-picked' in older terminology — "typically using professional or expert knowledge" (see third definition from Oxford Dictionary, above).



This is confirmed by the definition of curator:




curator Oxford Dictionary
noun




  • keeper or custodian of a museum or other collection:
    the curator of drawings at the National Gallery


  • person who selects acts to perform at a music festival.
    Next month, as curator of the Meltdown festival, she will play it in its entirety on stage for the first time.





Op's example sentence (in which the use of 'curated' is being considered) is:




Please select the best applications from all the ones that we've got.




I'm not clear exactly what items are intended to be referred to, nor exactly what meaning is intended to be conveyed, but, as it currently reads, that sentence means:




Please choose whichever applications you think are the best from our entire collection.




Although I may have misunderstood the intent, that sentence reads to me as if the customer is doing the choosing of what he/she thinks are "the best" items, from the entire collection available. On the other hand, a 'curated collection' should have already pre-selected only the best items, and not be offering "all the ones that we've got".



If the desired meaning does accord with my last sentence above, then I have the following suggestions:




Please make your choices from our carefully pre-selected [items]

Please make your selection from our expertly chosen collection of ...




Addendum



OP's additional clarification gives the following example:




Let's say there is a news app that shows me [all] news. But I only want to see specific news stories and not everything. So I would want the news app to ... [fill in the word here] ... the news stories before showing [them] to me.




First, on my understanding from the definitions and examples above, curation can only be done by a person: not by a machine.

Secondly, there is no specification of the criteria to be used by the app to select the appropriate ones to display; but (from the mention of "specific news stories") I assume the choice is based solely on the subject matter / content of the stories.

That is clearly not curation because it is not "using professional or expert knowledge" or any other careful selection by a person.



Without further information, the choice sounds merely as if it is categorisation or content choice. You could refer to the app "filtering the news stories by content/subject".






share|improve this answer


























  • I appreciate your patience in taking the time to write a good answer. Yes, it looks like the news app example could use the word filtering. Thank you.

    – mahacoder
    Jul 17 '16 at 8:37



















2














Although not used often in conversation, I think curated is perfectly fine in your sentence.




please choose the best applications from our curated selection




An alternative




please select the best applications from our array of choices




Another




please select the best applications from our choice selection







share|improve this answer
























  • can I use it in the the following sentence, "I would like to see a curated set of news stories, not all of them"?

    – mahacoder
    Jul 16 '16 at 18:12













  • @ak31 it sounds fine to me.

    – Drai
    Jul 16 '16 at 20:01











  • On the basis of the definitions of "curate" mentioned in my answer, that would mean something akin to 'hand-picked' news stories.

    – TrevorD
    Jul 16 '16 at 20:25



















1














"curate" implies that the selection process is based on personal tastes / feelings AND that the items are from different sources.



"shortlist" implies that the selection process is based on a defined set of criteria to be applied to an existing set of items / collection.



a more common term used in recent years (especially in online shopping sites / news sites) is "filter" where you eliminate items that don't fit your chosen criteria. The use of this term implies that the items are pre-categorised, tagged, or have keywords attached to them in order for the filtering process to work.



in the example of news feed / online shop / etc, you either set the filters after you've been presented with the full list, or you can pre-set the filters before you do a search



Each word broadly means the same thing, but very subtly mean different things to different people ... at the end of the day, it depends on your audience - the beauty of language is the ability to fine-tune your use of word to very specific audience/meaning






share|improve this answer































    0














    Your example sentence:




    please select the best applications from all the ones that we've got.




    Suggested:




    Please shortlist the best applications that we've got.







    share|improve this answer
























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      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes








      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      3














      Two dictionaries define the use of curate as a verb as follows:




      curate Cambridge Dictionary:
      verb [transitive]




      • to be in charge of selecting and caring for objects to be shown in a museum or to form part of a collection of art, an exhibition, etc.:
        She curated a recent exhibition of Indian artwork.

      • to be in charge of selecting films, performers, events, etc. to be included in a festival:
        a Messiaen festival curated by pianist Pierre-Laurent Aimard

      • to select things such as documents, music, products, or internet content to be included as part of a list or collection, or on a website:
        a curated library of short movies available online


      curate Oxford Dictionary:
      verb [with object]




      • Select, organize, and look after the items in (a collection or exhibition):
        both exhibitions are curated by the Centre’s director
        He has had ten years of museum experience curating exhibitions, commissioning new works, and developing artist residency programs.
        Plus, I am really excited to be guest curating a large exhibition from the museum's wonderful American Folk Art Collection.
        Over the past decade, my father has been slowly curating a collection of AIDS posters from all over the world, for the National Library of Medicine in Bethesda.


      • Select the performers or performances that will feature in (an arts event or programme):
        in past years the festival has been curated by the likes of David Bowie
        The Observer is media partner of this year's Meltdown festival, which is curated by Patti Smith.
        It's a great insane ending to a brilliantly curated day of music.
        The concert is part of this Meltdown Festival curated by Morrissey.


      • Select, organize, and present (online content, merchandise, information, etc.), typically using professional or expert knowledge:
        people not only want to connect when using a network but they also enjoy getting credit for sharing or curating information.

        (as adjective curated) a curated alternative to the world’s most popular video portal
        It's a curated platform with 225,000 apps.
        Mr Hirschorn said that people not only want to connect when using a network but they also enjoy getting credit for sharing or curating information.
        It appears that consumers like the integrated, curated systems and platforms that Apple has created.





      Personally, I've only previously come across the use of curated in connection with art or historical artifacts (e.g. in a museum), but it's clear that it can be used in connection with lists or collections on the internet.



      It's also clear, however, that it's only used in connection with collections of items that have been individually selected — one might have said 'hand-picked' in older terminology — "typically using professional or expert knowledge" (see third definition from Oxford Dictionary, above).



      This is confirmed by the definition of curator:




      curator Oxford Dictionary
      noun




      • keeper or custodian of a museum or other collection:
        the curator of drawings at the National Gallery


      • person who selects acts to perform at a music festival.
        Next month, as curator of the Meltdown festival, she will play it in its entirety on stage for the first time.





      Op's example sentence (in which the use of 'curated' is being considered) is:




      Please select the best applications from all the ones that we've got.




      I'm not clear exactly what items are intended to be referred to, nor exactly what meaning is intended to be conveyed, but, as it currently reads, that sentence means:




      Please choose whichever applications you think are the best from our entire collection.




      Although I may have misunderstood the intent, that sentence reads to me as if the customer is doing the choosing of what he/she thinks are "the best" items, from the entire collection available. On the other hand, a 'curated collection' should have already pre-selected only the best items, and not be offering "all the ones that we've got".



      If the desired meaning does accord with my last sentence above, then I have the following suggestions:




      Please make your choices from our carefully pre-selected [items]

      Please make your selection from our expertly chosen collection of ...




      Addendum



      OP's additional clarification gives the following example:




      Let's say there is a news app that shows me [all] news. But I only want to see specific news stories and not everything. So I would want the news app to ... [fill in the word here] ... the news stories before showing [them] to me.




      First, on my understanding from the definitions and examples above, curation can only be done by a person: not by a machine.

      Secondly, there is no specification of the criteria to be used by the app to select the appropriate ones to display; but (from the mention of "specific news stories") I assume the choice is based solely on the subject matter / content of the stories.

      That is clearly not curation because it is not "using professional or expert knowledge" or any other careful selection by a person.



      Without further information, the choice sounds merely as if it is categorisation or content choice. You could refer to the app "filtering the news stories by content/subject".






      share|improve this answer


























      • I appreciate your patience in taking the time to write a good answer. Yes, it looks like the news app example could use the word filtering. Thank you.

        – mahacoder
        Jul 17 '16 at 8:37
















      3














      Two dictionaries define the use of curate as a verb as follows:




      curate Cambridge Dictionary:
      verb [transitive]




      • to be in charge of selecting and caring for objects to be shown in a museum or to form part of a collection of art, an exhibition, etc.:
        She curated a recent exhibition of Indian artwork.

      • to be in charge of selecting films, performers, events, etc. to be included in a festival:
        a Messiaen festival curated by pianist Pierre-Laurent Aimard

      • to select things such as documents, music, products, or internet content to be included as part of a list or collection, or on a website:
        a curated library of short movies available online


      curate Oxford Dictionary:
      verb [with object]




      • Select, organize, and look after the items in (a collection or exhibition):
        both exhibitions are curated by the Centre’s director
        He has had ten years of museum experience curating exhibitions, commissioning new works, and developing artist residency programs.
        Plus, I am really excited to be guest curating a large exhibition from the museum's wonderful American Folk Art Collection.
        Over the past decade, my father has been slowly curating a collection of AIDS posters from all over the world, for the National Library of Medicine in Bethesda.


      • Select the performers or performances that will feature in (an arts event or programme):
        in past years the festival has been curated by the likes of David Bowie
        The Observer is media partner of this year's Meltdown festival, which is curated by Patti Smith.
        It's a great insane ending to a brilliantly curated day of music.
        The concert is part of this Meltdown Festival curated by Morrissey.


      • Select, organize, and present (online content, merchandise, information, etc.), typically using professional or expert knowledge:
        people not only want to connect when using a network but they also enjoy getting credit for sharing or curating information.

        (as adjective curated) a curated alternative to the world’s most popular video portal
        It's a curated platform with 225,000 apps.
        Mr Hirschorn said that people not only want to connect when using a network but they also enjoy getting credit for sharing or curating information.
        It appears that consumers like the integrated, curated systems and platforms that Apple has created.





      Personally, I've only previously come across the use of curated in connection with art or historical artifacts (e.g. in a museum), but it's clear that it can be used in connection with lists or collections on the internet.



      It's also clear, however, that it's only used in connection with collections of items that have been individually selected — one might have said 'hand-picked' in older terminology — "typically using professional or expert knowledge" (see third definition from Oxford Dictionary, above).



      This is confirmed by the definition of curator:




      curator Oxford Dictionary
      noun




      • keeper or custodian of a museum or other collection:
        the curator of drawings at the National Gallery


      • person who selects acts to perform at a music festival.
        Next month, as curator of the Meltdown festival, she will play it in its entirety on stage for the first time.





      Op's example sentence (in which the use of 'curated' is being considered) is:




      Please select the best applications from all the ones that we've got.




      I'm not clear exactly what items are intended to be referred to, nor exactly what meaning is intended to be conveyed, but, as it currently reads, that sentence means:




      Please choose whichever applications you think are the best from our entire collection.




      Although I may have misunderstood the intent, that sentence reads to me as if the customer is doing the choosing of what he/she thinks are "the best" items, from the entire collection available. On the other hand, a 'curated collection' should have already pre-selected only the best items, and not be offering "all the ones that we've got".



      If the desired meaning does accord with my last sentence above, then I have the following suggestions:




      Please make your choices from our carefully pre-selected [items]

      Please make your selection from our expertly chosen collection of ...




      Addendum



      OP's additional clarification gives the following example:




      Let's say there is a news app that shows me [all] news. But I only want to see specific news stories and not everything. So I would want the news app to ... [fill in the word here] ... the news stories before showing [them] to me.




      First, on my understanding from the definitions and examples above, curation can only be done by a person: not by a machine.

      Secondly, there is no specification of the criteria to be used by the app to select the appropriate ones to display; but (from the mention of "specific news stories") I assume the choice is based solely on the subject matter / content of the stories.

      That is clearly not curation because it is not "using professional or expert knowledge" or any other careful selection by a person.



      Without further information, the choice sounds merely as if it is categorisation or content choice. You could refer to the app "filtering the news stories by content/subject".






      share|improve this answer


























      • I appreciate your patience in taking the time to write a good answer. Yes, it looks like the news app example could use the word filtering. Thank you.

        – mahacoder
        Jul 17 '16 at 8:37














      3












      3








      3







      Two dictionaries define the use of curate as a verb as follows:




      curate Cambridge Dictionary:
      verb [transitive]




      • to be in charge of selecting and caring for objects to be shown in a museum or to form part of a collection of art, an exhibition, etc.:
        She curated a recent exhibition of Indian artwork.

      • to be in charge of selecting films, performers, events, etc. to be included in a festival:
        a Messiaen festival curated by pianist Pierre-Laurent Aimard

      • to select things such as documents, music, products, or internet content to be included as part of a list or collection, or on a website:
        a curated library of short movies available online


      curate Oxford Dictionary:
      verb [with object]




      • Select, organize, and look after the items in (a collection or exhibition):
        both exhibitions are curated by the Centre’s director
        He has had ten years of museum experience curating exhibitions, commissioning new works, and developing artist residency programs.
        Plus, I am really excited to be guest curating a large exhibition from the museum's wonderful American Folk Art Collection.
        Over the past decade, my father has been slowly curating a collection of AIDS posters from all over the world, for the National Library of Medicine in Bethesda.


      • Select the performers or performances that will feature in (an arts event or programme):
        in past years the festival has been curated by the likes of David Bowie
        The Observer is media partner of this year's Meltdown festival, which is curated by Patti Smith.
        It's a great insane ending to a brilliantly curated day of music.
        The concert is part of this Meltdown Festival curated by Morrissey.


      • Select, organize, and present (online content, merchandise, information, etc.), typically using professional or expert knowledge:
        people not only want to connect when using a network but they also enjoy getting credit for sharing or curating information.

        (as adjective curated) a curated alternative to the world’s most popular video portal
        It's a curated platform with 225,000 apps.
        Mr Hirschorn said that people not only want to connect when using a network but they also enjoy getting credit for sharing or curating information.
        It appears that consumers like the integrated, curated systems and platforms that Apple has created.





      Personally, I've only previously come across the use of curated in connection with art or historical artifacts (e.g. in a museum), but it's clear that it can be used in connection with lists or collections on the internet.



      It's also clear, however, that it's only used in connection with collections of items that have been individually selected — one might have said 'hand-picked' in older terminology — "typically using professional or expert knowledge" (see third definition from Oxford Dictionary, above).



      This is confirmed by the definition of curator:




      curator Oxford Dictionary
      noun




      • keeper or custodian of a museum or other collection:
        the curator of drawings at the National Gallery


      • person who selects acts to perform at a music festival.
        Next month, as curator of the Meltdown festival, she will play it in its entirety on stage for the first time.





      Op's example sentence (in which the use of 'curated' is being considered) is:




      Please select the best applications from all the ones that we've got.




      I'm not clear exactly what items are intended to be referred to, nor exactly what meaning is intended to be conveyed, but, as it currently reads, that sentence means:




      Please choose whichever applications you think are the best from our entire collection.




      Although I may have misunderstood the intent, that sentence reads to me as if the customer is doing the choosing of what he/she thinks are "the best" items, from the entire collection available. On the other hand, a 'curated collection' should have already pre-selected only the best items, and not be offering "all the ones that we've got".



      If the desired meaning does accord with my last sentence above, then I have the following suggestions:




      Please make your choices from our carefully pre-selected [items]

      Please make your selection from our expertly chosen collection of ...




      Addendum



      OP's additional clarification gives the following example:




      Let's say there is a news app that shows me [all] news. But I only want to see specific news stories and not everything. So I would want the news app to ... [fill in the word here] ... the news stories before showing [them] to me.




      First, on my understanding from the definitions and examples above, curation can only be done by a person: not by a machine.

      Secondly, there is no specification of the criteria to be used by the app to select the appropriate ones to display; but (from the mention of "specific news stories") I assume the choice is based solely on the subject matter / content of the stories.

      That is clearly not curation because it is not "using professional or expert knowledge" or any other careful selection by a person.



      Without further information, the choice sounds merely as if it is categorisation or content choice. You could refer to the app "filtering the news stories by content/subject".






      share|improve this answer















      Two dictionaries define the use of curate as a verb as follows:




      curate Cambridge Dictionary:
      verb [transitive]




      • to be in charge of selecting and caring for objects to be shown in a museum or to form part of a collection of art, an exhibition, etc.:
        She curated a recent exhibition of Indian artwork.

      • to be in charge of selecting films, performers, events, etc. to be included in a festival:
        a Messiaen festival curated by pianist Pierre-Laurent Aimard

      • to select things such as documents, music, products, or internet content to be included as part of a list or collection, or on a website:
        a curated library of short movies available online


      curate Oxford Dictionary:
      verb [with object]




      • Select, organize, and look after the items in (a collection or exhibition):
        both exhibitions are curated by the Centre’s director
        He has had ten years of museum experience curating exhibitions, commissioning new works, and developing artist residency programs.
        Plus, I am really excited to be guest curating a large exhibition from the museum's wonderful American Folk Art Collection.
        Over the past decade, my father has been slowly curating a collection of AIDS posters from all over the world, for the National Library of Medicine in Bethesda.


      • Select the performers or performances that will feature in (an arts event or programme):
        in past years the festival has been curated by the likes of David Bowie
        The Observer is media partner of this year's Meltdown festival, which is curated by Patti Smith.
        It's a great insane ending to a brilliantly curated day of music.
        The concert is part of this Meltdown Festival curated by Morrissey.


      • Select, organize, and present (online content, merchandise, information, etc.), typically using professional or expert knowledge:
        people not only want to connect when using a network but they also enjoy getting credit for sharing or curating information.

        (as adjective curated) a curated alternative to the world’s most popular video portal
        It's a curated platform with 225,000 apps.
        Mr Hirschorn said that people not only want to connect when using a network but they also enjoy getting credit for sharing or curating information.
        It appears that consumers like the integrated, curated systems and platforms that Apple has created.





      Personally, I've only previously come across the use of curated in connection with art or historical artifacts (e.g. in a museum), but it's clear that it can be used in connection with lists or collections on the internet.



      It's also clear, however, that it's only used in connection with collections of items that have been individually selected — one might have said 'hand-picked' in older terminology — "typically using professional or expert knowledge" (see third definition from Oxford Dictionary, above).



      This is confirmed by the definition of curator:




      curator Oxford Dictionary
      noun




      • keeper or custodian of a museum or other collection:
        the curator of drawings at the National Gallery


      • person who selects acts to perform at a music festival.
        Next month, as curator of the Meltdown festival, she will play it in its entirety on stage for the first time.





      Op's example sentence (in which the use of 'curated' is being considered) is:




      Please select the best applications from all the ones that we've got.




      I'm not clear exactly what items are intended to be referred to, nor exactly what meaning is intended to be conveyed, but, as it currently reads, that sentence means:




      Please choose whichever applications you think are the best from our entire collection.




      Although I may have misunderstood the intent, that sentence reads to me as if the customer is doing the choosing of what he/she thinks are "the best" items, from the entire collection available. On the other hand, a 'curated collection' should have already pre-selected only the best items, and not be offering "all the ones that we've got".



      If the desired meaning does accord with my last sentence above, then I have the following suggestions:




      Please make your choices from our carefully pre-selected [items]

      Please make your selection from our expertly chosen collection of ...




      Addendum



      OP's additional clarification gives the following example:




      Let's say there is a news app that shows me [all] news. But I only want to see specific news stories and not everything. So I would want the news app to ... [fill in the word here] ... the news stories before showing [them] to me.




      First, on my understanding from the definitions and examples above, curation can only be done by a person: not by a machine.

      Secondly, there is no specification of the criteria to be used by the app to select the appropriate ones to display; but (from the mention of "specific news stories") I assume the choice is based solely on the subject matter / content of the stories.

      That is clearly not curation because it is not "using professional or expert knowledge" or any other careful selection by a person.



      Without further information, the choice sounds merely as if it is categorisation or content choice. You could refer to the app "filtering the news stories by content/subject".







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Jul 16 '16 at 19:46

























      answered Jul 16 '16 at 19:13









      TrevorDTrevorD

      10.7k22457




      10.7k22457













      • I appreciate your patience in taking the time to write a good answer. Yes, it looks like the news app example could use the word filtering. Thank you.

        – mahacoder
        Jul 17 '16 at 8:37



















      • I appreciate your patience in taking the time to write a good answer. Yes, it looks like the news app example could use the word filtering. Thank you.

        – mahacoder
        Jul 17 '16 at 8:37

















      I appreciate your patience in taking the time to write a good answer. Yes, it looks like the news app example could use the word filtering. Thank you.

      – mahacoder
      Jul 17 '16 at 8:37





      I appreciate your patience in taking the time to write a good answer. Yes, it looks like the news app example could use the word filtering. Thank you.

      – mahacoder
      Jul 17 '16 at 8:37













      2














      Although not used often in conversation, I think curated is perfectly fine in your sentence.




      please choose the best applications from our curated selection




      An alternative




      please select the best applications from our array of choices




      Another




      please select the best applications from our choice selection







      share|improve this answer
























      • can I use it in the the following sentence, "I would like to see a curated set of news stories, not all of them"?

        – mahacoder
        Jul 16 '16 at 18:12













      • @ak31 it sounds fine to me.

        – Drai
        Jul 16 '16 at 20:01











      • On the basis of the definitions of "curate" mentioned in my answer, that would mean something akin to 'hand-picked' news stories.

        – TrevorD
        Jul 16 '16 at 20:25
















      2














      Although not used often in conversation, I think curated is perfectly fine in your sentence.




      please choose the best applications from our curated selection




      An alternative




      please select the best applications from our array of choices




      Another




      please select the best applications from our choice selection







      share|improve this answer
























      • can I use it in the the following sentence, "I would like to see a curated set of news stories, not all of them"?

        – mahacoder
        Jul 16 '16 at 18:12













      • @ak31 it sounds fine to me.

        – Drai
        Jul 16 '16 at 20:01











      • On the basis of the definitions of "curate" mentioned in my answer, that would mean something akin to 'hand-picked' news stories.

        – TrevorD
        Jul 16 '16 at 20:25














      2












      2








      2







      Although not used often in conversation, I think curated is perfectly fine in your sentence.




      please choose the best applications from our curated selection




      An alternative




      please select the best applications from our array of choices




      Another




      please select the best applications from our choice selection







      share|improve this answer













      Although not used often in conversation, I think curated is perfectly fine in your sentence.




      please choose the best applications from our curated selection




      An alternative




      please select the best applications from our array of choices




      Another




      please select the best applications from our choice selection








      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Jul 16 '16 at 14:10









      DraiDrai

      5302714




      5302714













      • can I use it in the the following sentence, "I would like to see a curated set of news stories, not all of them"?

        – mahacoder
        Jul 16 '16 at 18:12













      • @ak31 it sounds fine to me.

        – Drai
        Jul 16 '16 at 20:01











      • On the basis of the definitions of "curate" mentioned in my answer, that would mean something akin to 'hand-picked' news stories.

        – TrevorD
        Jul 16 '16 at 20:25



















      • can I use it in the the following sentence, "I would like to see a curated set of news stories, not all of them"?

        – mahacoder
        Jul 16 '16 at 18:12













      • @ak31 it sounds fine to me.

        – Drai
        Jul 16 '16 at 20:01











      • On the basis of the definitions of "curate" mentioned in my answer, that would mean something akin to 'hand-picked' news stories.

        – TrevorD
        Jul 16 '16 at 20:25

















      can I use it in the the following sentence, "I would like to see a curated set of news stories, not all of them"?

      – mahacoder
      Jul 16 '16 at 18:12







      can I use it in the the following sentence, "I would like to see a curated set of news stories, not all of them"?

      – mahacoder
      Jul 16 '16 at 18:12















      @ak31 it sounds fine to me.

      – Drai
      Jul 16 '16 at 20:01





      @ak31 it sounds fine to me.

      – Drai
      Jul 16 '16 at 20:01













      On the basis of the definitions of "curate" mentioned in my answer, that would mean something akin to 'hand-picked' news stories.

      – TrevorD
      Jul 16 '16 at 20:25





      On the basis of the definitions of "curate" mentioned in my answer, that would mean something akin to 'hand-picked' news stories.

      – TrevorD
      Jul 16 '16 at 20:25











      1














      "curate" implies that the selection process is based on personal tastes / feelings AND that the items are from different sources.



      "shortlist" implies that the selection process is based on a defined set of criteria to be applied to an existing set of items / collection.



      a more common term used in recent years (especially in online shopping sites / news sites) is "filter" where you eliminate items that don't fit your chosen criteria. The use of this term implies that the items are pre-categorised, tagged, or have keywords attached to them in order for the filtering process to work.



      in the example of news feed / online shop / etc, you either set the filters after you've been presented with the full list, or you can pre-set the filters before you do a search



      Each word broadly means the same thing, but very subtly mean different things to different people ... at the end of the day, it depends on your audience - the beauty of language is the ability to fine-tune your use of word to very specific audience/meaning






      share|improve this answer




























        1














        "curate" implies that the selection process is based on personal tastes / feelings AND that the items are from different sources.



        "shortlist" implies that the selection process is based on a defined set of criteria to be applied to an existing set of items / collection.



        a more common term used in recent years (especially in online shopping sites / news sites) is "filter" where you eliminate items that don't fit your chosen criteria. The use of this term implies that the items are pre-categorised, tagged, or have keywords attached to them in order for the filtering process to work.



        in the example of news feed / online shop / etc, you either set the filters after you've been presented with the full list, or you can pre-set the filters before you do a search



        Each word broadly means the same thing, but very subtly mean different things to different people ... at the end of the day, it depends on your audience - the beauty of language is the ability to fine-tune your use of word to very specific audience/meaning






        share|improve this answer


























          1












          1








          1







          "curate" implies that the selection process is based on personal tastes / feelings AND that the items are from different sources.



          "shortlist" implies that the selection process is based on a defined set of criteria to be applied to an existing set of items / collection.



          a more common term used in recent years (especially in online shopping sites / news sites) is "filter" where you eliminate items that don't fit your chosen criteria. The use of this term implies that the items are pre-categorised, tagged, or have keywords attached to them in order for the filtering process to work.



          in the example of news feed / online shop / etc, you either set the filters after you've been presented with the full list, or you can pre-set the filters before you do a search



          Each word broadly means the same thing, but very subtly mean different things to different people ... at the end of the day, it depends on your audience - the beauty of language is the ability to fine-tune your use of word to very specific audience/meaning






          share|improve this answer













          "curate" implies that the selection process is based on personal tastes / feelings AND that the items are from different sources.



          "shortlist" implies that the selection process is based on a defined set of criteria to be applied to an existing set of items / collection.



          a more common term used in recent years (especially in online shopping sites / news sites) is "filter" where you eliminate items that don't fit your chosen criteria. The use of this term implies that the items are pre-categorised, tagged, or have keywords attached to them in order for the filtering process to work.



          in the example of news feed / online shop / etc, you either set the filters after you've been presented with the full list, or you can pre-set the filters before you do a search



          Each word broadly means the same thing, but very subtly mean different things to different people ... at the end of the day, it depends on your audience - the beauty of language is the ability to fine-tune your use of word to very specific audience/meaning







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Jul 11 '18 at 13:35









          W KhaiW Khai

          111




          111























              0














              Your example sentence:




              please select the best applications from all the ones that we've got.




              Suggested:




              Please shortlist the best applications that we've got.







              share|improve this answer






























                0














                Your example sentence:




                please select the best applications from all the ones that we've got.




                Suggested:




                Please shortlist the best applications that we've got.







                share|improve this answer




























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  Your example sentence:




                  please select the best applications from all the ones that we've got.




                  Suggested:




                  Please shortlist the best applications that we've got.







                  share|improve this answer















                  Your example sentence:




                  please select the best applications from all the ones that we've got.




                  Suggested:




                  Please shortlist the best applications that we've got.








                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Jul 16 '16 at 18:04









                  TrevorD

                  10.7k22457




                  10.7k22457










                  answered Jul 16 '16 at 13:58









                  alwayslearningalwayslearning

                  26.4k63894




                  26.4k63894

















                      protected by Community 2 hours ago



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