Sure. There are tools that enable this. Consider a PDF reader. You can highlight text within a PDF without having to add it to a story. The highlighting feature is mainly for emphasizing important parts, and it doesn't necessarily have to be part of a story. You just need to look for the highlighting option in the relevant application.
Yes, you can make a highlight without adding to the story. For example, in a text document, you can use a highlighting tool (like in some word processors) to mark a particular section as a highlight. This doesn't change or add to the actual story content, but just visually emphasizes a part.
I don't think it's possible. A highlight usually involves emphasizing or featuring certain parts of the story, and that kind of selection can feel like an addition in a way.
Definitely. Another way is to use different font sizes or bold/italic styles for key points in your presentation. This is a simple way to make a highlight. By doing this, you're just emphasizing parts of the existing content without adding new elements that would change the story of your presentation.
Sure. In many digital content management systems, there are independent highlight - creation tools. These are designed to let you pick out important or interesting parts without integrating them into a story structure. Just look for options like 'Create Highlight' or 'Mark as Highlight' that are not linked to the story - adding process.
Sure. For example, if you are using a text editor with annotation features. You can use the highlight function which is separate from the text content itself. It's like putting a virtual marker on the text without changing the words of the story. So it's possible to add a highlight without adding to the story.
Yes, you can use formatting tools like bold or italicize specific parts of the existing text to create a highlight without actually adding new content to the story.