Related Searches
on Ask.com
recorded - 2 dictionary results
re⋅cord
[v. ri-kawrd; n., adj. rek-erd]
–verb (used with object)
| 1. | to set down in writing or the like, as for the purpose of preserving evidence. |
| 2. | to cause to be set down or registered: to record one's vote. |
| 3. | to state or indicate: He recorded his protest, but it was disregarded. |
| 4. | to serve to relate or to tell of: The document records that the battle took place six years earlier. |
| 5. | to set down or register in some permanent form, as on a seismograph. |
| 6. | to set down, register, or fix by characteristic marks, incisions, magnetism, etc., for the purpose of reproduction by a phonograph or magnetic reproducer. |
| 7. | to make a recording of: The orchestra recorded the 6th Symphony. |
–verb (used without object)
| 8. | to record something; make a record. |
–noun record
| 9. | an act of recording. |
| 10. | the state of being recorded, as in writing. |
| 11. | an account in writing or the like preserving the memory or knowledge of facts or events. |
| 12. | information or knowledge preserved in writing or the like. |
| 13. | a report, list, or aggregate of actions or achievements: He made a good record in college. The ship has a fine sailing record. |
| 14. | a legally documented history of criminal activity: They discovered that the suspect had a record. |
| 15. | something or someone serving as a remembrance; memorial: Keep this souvenir as a record of your visit. |
| 16. | the tracing, marking, or the like, made by a recording instrument. |
| 17. | something on which sound or images have been recorded for subsequent reproduction, as a grooved disk that is played on a phonograph or an optical disk for recording sound (audiodisk) or images (videodisk). Compare compact disk. |
| 18. | the highest or best rate, amount, etc., ever attained, esp. in sports: to hold the record for home runs; to break the record in the high jump. |
| 19. | Sports. the standing of a team or individual with respect to contests won, lost, and tied. |
| 20. | an official writing intended to be preserved. |
| 21. | Computers. a group of related fields, or a single field, treated as a unit and comprising part of a file or data set, for purposes of input, processing, output, or storage by a computer. |
| 22. | Law.
|
–adjective record
—Idioms| 23. | making or affording a record. |
| 24. | surpassing or superior to all others: a record year for automobile sales. |
| 25. | go on record, to issue a public statement of one's opinion or stand: He went on record as advocating immediate integration. |
| 26. | off the record,
|
| 27. | on record,
|
Origin:
1175–1225; 1875–80 for def. 17; (v.) ME recorden < OF recorder < L recordārī to remember, recollect (re- re- + cord- (s. of cors) heart + -ārī inf. ending); (n.) ME record(e) < OF, deriv. of recorder; cf. ML recordum
1175–1225; 1875–80 for def. 17; (v.) ME recorden < OF recorder < L recordārī to remember, recollect (re- re- + cord- (s. of cors) heart + -ārī inf. ending); (n.) ME record(e) < OF, deriv. of recorder; cf. ML recordum

Related forms:
re⋅cord⋅a⋅ble, adjective
rec⋅ord⋅less, adjective
Synonyms:
1. register, enroll, enter, note. 11. chronicle, history, journal; note, memorandum.
1. register, enroll, enter, note. 11. chronicle, history, journal; note, memorandum.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
Cite This Source
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
Cite This Source
|
Link To recorded
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Cite This Source
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Cite This Source
Copyright © 2009, Dictionary.com, LLC. All rights reserved.

