transcription

[ US /ˌtɹænsˈkɹɪpʃən/ ]
[ UK /tɹænskɹˈɪpʃən/ ]
NOUN
  1. something written, especially copied from one medium to another, as a typewritten version of dictation
  2. (genetics) the organic process whereby the DNA sequence in a gene is copied into mRNA; the process whereby a base sequence of messenger RNA is synthesized on a template of complementary DNA
  3. a sound or television recording (e.g., from a broadcast to a tape recording)
  4. the act of arranging and adapting a piece of music
  5. the act of making a record (especially an audio record)
    she watched the recording from a sound-proof booth
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How To Use transcription 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
  • 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.
  • 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
  • Song L, Aster JC, Blacklow SC (2006) Structural basis for cooperativity in recruitment of MAML coactivators to Notch transcription complexes. PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles
  • The large number of diacritics makes it possible to mark minute shades of sound as required for a narrow phonetic transcription.
  • From Dvo ř á k ' s " New World " Symphony, with its construct of Indian and African-American folk idioms, to Messiaen ' s bird-song transcriptions of Bryce Canyon, composers have responded to it most often with collages, drawing on different musical and even extramusical references. Turning the City
  • The transactivation assay needed to sensitively detect changes in transcription factor activity.
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