Find the word definition

Crossword clues for transcript

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
transcript
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ VERB
read
▪ But the Mirror has read a transcript of the 2year-old recording and found much of it to be inconsequential gossip.
▪ Thompson must have read the explosive Nixon transcripts wistfully.
▪ She read the transcript of the negotiations twice and still found it impossible to believe.
▪ Then I read the entire transcript.
▪ I am now reading Uitsmijter's transcript of what the laibon had on his mind.
▪ Detailed case studies, which will involve reading original transcripts, will be followed up by interviews of forensic scientists.
▪ Participants may read the transcript and, if they are unhappy, can veto release for a time.
▪ Look at Oscar Wilde, she'd say! Read the transcripts of his trial!
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A transcript was made of the examination.
▪ After 10 minutes, the reactions were stopped and the transcripts produced analyzed by primer extension, polyacrylamide-urea gel electrophoresis and autoradiography.
▪ Democrats said the transcript of the conference call show Gingrich doing just that.
▪ FIG. 4 Expression studies of the atk transcript. a, Expression of the atk transcript in a variety of human tissues.
▪ Sometimes the questioning went on for several days, and always the words were transcribed to fill hundreds of pages of transcript.
▪ The transcript showed without a doubt that the attack not only took place but was in fact deliberate.
▪ The lawyers also said they want to get a transcript of the cockpit voice recorder.
▪ The mutation leads to change in the transcript level equilibrium.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Transcript

Transcript \Tran"script\ (tr[a^]n"skr[i^]pt), n. [L. transcriptum, neut. of transcriptus, p. p. of transcribere. See Transcribe.]

  1. That which has been transcribed; a writing or composition consisting of the same words as the original; a written copy.

    The decalogue of Moses was but a transcript.
    --South.

  2. A copy of any kind; an imitation.

    The Grecian learning was but a transcript of the Chaldean and Egyptian.
    --Glanvill.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
transcript

"written copy of a document," c.1300, from Medieval Latin transcriptum, neuter past participle of Latin transcribere (see transcribe).

Wiktionary
transcript

n. 1 Something which has been transcribed; a writing or composition consisting of the same words as the original; a written copy. 2 A copy of any kind; an imitation. 3 A written version of what was said orally; as, a transcript of a trial. 4 (context genetics English) A sequence of RNA produced by transcription 5 (context education English) An inventory of the courses taken and grades earned of a student alleged throughout a course.

WordNet
transcript
  1. n. something that has been transcribed; a written record (usually typewritten) of dictated or recorded speech; "he read a transcript of the interrogation"; "you can obtain a transcript of this radio program by sending a self-addressed envelope to the station"

  2. a reproduction of a written record (e.g. of a legal or school record) [syn: copy]

Wikipedia
Transcript

Transcript may refer to:

  • Transcript (education), a copy of a student's permanent academic record
  • Transcript (law), a written record of spoken language in court proceedings
  • Transcript (programming language), a computer programming language
  • The Transcript, Ohio Wesleyan University's student-run newspaper
  • Primary transcript ( Genetics), single-stranded ribonucleic acid (RNA) synthesized by transcription of DNA
Transcript (programming language)

Transcript is the dynamic programming language used in Revolution, a commercially marketed cross-platform rapid application development environment created by Runtime Revolution Ltd.

Revolution runs on Mac OS 7,8,9, Mac OS X, Windows 95 through XP, and several flavors of Unix. Revolution's language, Transcript, is dynamically typed, English-like, and provides features including associative arrays, regular expressions, QuickTime support, database access, and TCP/IP connectivity. It is claimed to allow beginning programmers to get started easily. For seasoned programmers steeped in "conventional' languages, the learning curve is much steeper as many former means of "doing things" must be abandonded.

Revolution project files can be used on any platform, and run with the platform's look, feel, and behavior requiring little modification. Menus are handled correctly for each platform.

Compiling produces a single-file standalone executable for each platform targeted. There is no separate runtime necessary.

The ability to compile executables as well as the number of platforms that can be targeted are depenedent upon the version; see "Versions" below.

Revolution offers high-level access to many commonly used features. For example, to load the contents of a web page into a variable takes one line of code:

put url "http://www.yahoo.com" into tMyVariable

FTP and file access is similar:

put url "ftp://john:[email protected]:2121/picture.jpg" into url "binfile:myFile.txt"

Transcript (education)

In education, a transcript is an inventory of the courses taken and grades earned of a student throughout a course. There are official transcripts and transcripts which can be made by the student and verified and attested by an authorized person.

Transcript (law)

A transcript is a written record of spoken language. In court proceedings, a transcript is usually a record of all decisions of the judge, and the spoken arguments by the litigants' lawyers. A related term used in the United States is docket, not a full transcript. The transcript is expected to be an exact and unedited record of every spoken word, with each speaker indicated. Such a record was originally made by court stenographers who used a form of shorthand abbreviation to write as quickly as people spoke. Today, most court reporters use a specialized machine with a phonetic key system, typing a key or key combination for every sound a person utters. Many courts worldwide have now begun to use digital recording systems. The recordings are archived and are sent to court reporters or transcribers only when a transcript is requested. Many US transcripts are indexed by Deposition Source so that they may be searched by legal professionals via the Internet. Transcripts may be available publicly or to a restricted group of persons; a fee may be charged.

Usage examples of "transcript".

In it she had referred to the Australian court proceedings concerning Montayne, setting out the facts that she had discovered during her reading of the trial transcript and that had not appeared in the summary version circulated through the company earlier.

He rolled the printer platen back over the blank transcript and removed the paper clip.

But Signor Arienta of Varallo, whose industry in collecting materials for a history of the Sacro Monte cannot be surpassed, showed me a transcript from an old plan of the church of S.

Fassola may or may not have urged Torrotti to write a second work upon the Sacro Monte, but he can hardly have intended him to make it little more than a transcript of his own book.

If a red light flashes, the subroutine converting your speech into a written transcript has missed a word or words and some repetition may be necessary.

The pages passed into actual transcript, uncondensed, disjointed ramblings.

But because his testimony was unsworn, there was no transcript and no recording made.

The door of the ladies room slammed shut, thus leaving the location of the mysterious transcript unspecified and my left eardrum aquiver in tympanic shock.

Transcripts were transferred and Betsy, Glover, Brooks, Rollins, and Little Becky were registered for fall enrollment at the Towne High School in twelfth, eleventh, and ninth grades.

FBI interview quoted from FBI 302 interview transcript, Hamilton Jordan, August 24, 1979, Records Relating to the Hamilton Jordan Investigation, Records of the Independent Counsels, National Archives II, RB 449, Box 2.

I have also seen a transcript on display in your Situation Centre just now, but I have this copy here and in case some of your Excellencies may not have had the opportunity to consider it I should like to read it to you now.

The bundle of letters relating to the purchase of the house were with the transcript.

I objected on the grounds that it was prejudicial to play the audio recording when the transcript would suffice but the judge quickly overruled me before Minton even had to counter.

Complex neurophysiological changes take place in your mind and body according to the direction you give yourself in the transcripts.

I just happened to see the file on the day that the transcripts came in because we were trying to allocate credits for the nondegree graduate students.