transcript

[ US /ˈtɹænsˌkɹɪpt/ ]
[ UK /tɹˈænskɹɪpt/ ]
NOUN
  1. a reproduction of a written record (e.g. of a legal or school record)
  2. something that has been transcribed; a written record (usually typewritten) of dictated or recorded speech
    you can obtain a transcript of this radio program by sending a self-addressed envelope to the station
    he read a transcript of the interrogation
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How To Use transcript In A Sentence

  • Homeobox genes encode transcription factors involved in many aspects of developmental processes.
  • It checks bank account numbers before accepting them and will detect many common transcription errors, including incorrectly entered and transposed characters. Times, Sunday Times
  • Evidence from pages 46, 47 and 48 of the transcript of the examination of Luke Brock was read into the court record.
  • Yet several works were commissioned for smart urban dance, music-theatre and performance-art events; five of the 22 tracks are clever transcriptions of Shostakovich piano pieces.
  • As with any verbatim transcript, it can be a little hard to follow in places, but it's worth plowing through the whole thing if you're really interested in all this.
  • This volume consists of Record Commission transcripts of documents found mostly in Normandy, and dated up to 1206 (the end of English control of the region). Calendar of Papers Preserved in France
  • The viral nucleocapsid enters the host cell and breaks open releasing two viral RNA-strands and 3 essential replication enzymes: Integrase, Protease and Reverse Transcriptase WN.com - Business News
  • Two examples, from her impressive "Transformation" disc, are the pianist's soulful performance of Domenico Scarlatti's Sonata in F Minor and her sprightly, exceptionally characterful transversal of Igor Stravinsky's Three Movements From "Petrushka," a transcription based on his ballet score. The Fast and the Serious
  • If each gene regulated by a transcription factor is viewed as one function of that factor, then most transcription factors are multifunctional.
  • The audience becomes gradually and wonderfully aware that the musical process is an almost direct transcription of the physical one. Times, Sunday Times
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