stenographer

[ US /stɛˈnəɡɹəfɝ/ ]
[ UK /stɛnˈɒɡɹəfɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. someone skilled in the transcription of speech (especially dictation)
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How To Use stenographer In A Sentence

  • The police stenographer recorded the man's confession word by word.
  • The door of the far room opened to admit a stenographer; Tobes was over by the window, innocent and unconcerned. A MEANS TO EVIL
  • Remember, Carol," he said to the stenographer ," this transcript is sealed until I say further. ROUGH JUSTICE
  • The stenographer may be either a hotel employee or an employee of a concessionaire.
  • Lady from the Stenographer's Agency to see about the position, said Pitcher.
  • True to form, he had cussed out the office boy, spoken in fatherly fashion to the trainmaster over the telephone about the lateness of No. 210, remarked to the stenographer that her last letter had looked like the exquisite tracks of a cow's hoof -- and then he had read two telegrams. O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1921
  • I won't "condescend" to serve as stenographer of who said what at the forum Green Mountain Daily - Front Page
  • The second letter has a date line, personal signature and initials of dictator and stenographer -- little touches that add to the personality of the letter_ Business Correspondence
  • The word [nazaf (nun-zayin-fey)] "censured," "placed under ban," by a form of Rabbinical interpretation known as _notarikon_ (stenographer's method, abbreviation), is connected with the words of this verse in Pirke Avot Sayings of the Jewish Fathers
  • In the presence of Lawton, Seiler, a court stenographer, and the paramedic, the judge summoned each of the jurors individually and asked them under oath if they had called a paramedic in the middle of the night to discuss the case. Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil
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