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logbook

[ US /ˈɫɔɡˌbʊk/ ]
[ UK /lˈɒɡbʊk/ ]
NOUN
  1. a book in which the log is written

How To Use logbook In A Sentence

  • Most of the aircraft have no logbooks, have run-out engines and props, and need a lot of work.
  • That would be bad enough, but, unfortunately, the stolen property was an aircraft logbook, which had been taken out of a plane.
  • Parking attendants often continue issuing the ticket after the vehicle has left the scene and then untruthfully write in their logbook that the ticket was FTW (fixed to windscreen) or GTD (given to driver).
  • This logbook is like the professional logbook for pilots with all the entries you'll need, plus two user-definable fields.
  • If this is the first annual inspection that your IA has performed on your plane, be sure you allow ample time for review of your plane's airframe, engine and propeller logbooks.
  • What would be overripe overplotting in lesser hands becomes wonderfully credible here, with cleverly drawn characters (Paz and his most excellent mum must surely return), trunkloads of ethno-botanical factoids, and interspersed sections from Jane’s African logbook. Tropic of Night: Summary and book reviews of Tropic of Night by Michael Gruber.
  • These should be recorded in a logbook, it said. Times, Sunday Times
  • The discharge of hold-washings and other residues by vessels carrying noxious or corrosive goods must be conducted in compliance with the state provisions for vessel sewage discharge and shall be truthfully recorded in the logbook.
  • They are his logbooks chronicling his walks and climbs, some of them twice, to the summit of every Scottish mountain over 3,000 ft.
  • Phelps, who first went to sea as a cabin boy in 1816, worked from original journals and logbooks now mostly lost.
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