extract
This term conveys a sense of deliberate, often technical precision. It suggests a process of isolation where a specific, valuable element is separated from a larger, less useful mass. It is frequently used in medical, chemical, and legal contexts to describe a methodical removal. When used in the context of information, it implies a targeted search to pull out key data from a dense text. This differs from simply reading or summarizing, as it suggests the active selection of specific components for a new purpose.
Meanings
Etymology
Derived from the Latin word extractus, which is the past participle of extrahere. This term is a compound formed from ex meaning out and trahere meaning to draw or pull. It entered Middle English via Old French, maintaining the core sense of drawing something out from a larger mass or a fixed position.