Similar words: video recorder, record, prerecord, recording, off the record, go on record, record level, interior decorator. Meaning: ['rekərd /'rekɔːd] adj. 1. set down or registered in a permanent form especially on film or tape for reproduction 2. (of securities) having the owner's name entered in a register 3. recorded or listed in a directory.
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151. There is evidence that the Babylonians were using sine tables, recorded in cuneiform symbols on clay tablets, long before Hipparchus.
152. Stanford defensive end Kailee Wong recorded a late fourth-quarter safety for the second straight week....
153. That yielded, among other things, 50 hours of recorded conversation with Ames.
154. In the ancient world, literate societies recorded their own history in written documents.
155. Thus the considerable increase in recorded burglary during the 1970s was largely a recording phenomenon.
156. The specialisms of geriatrics and orthopaedic surgery have recorded the largest decreases in average length of stay.
157. A plaque was found in the clubhouse basement that recorded the club members of 1787.
158. These will directly affect the career structure within the banks, causing distortions, blockages and a recorded division of labour.
159. Authorised conditions of disposal can be recorded together with any associated risk assessments.
160. The first diary entries were no doubt recorded on an impulse, in odd hours in his room in the shophouse.
161. In contrast, a pronounced net fluid absorption was recorded on days 11-14.
162. One clearly lay south of the road near the north-west gate, where Stukeley recorded urn burials and Artis noted stone coffins.
163. But a tape, on which she recorded a conversation she had with Maurice a few weeks before her death.
164. Carpenter died of complications from anorexia in 1983; the performances were recorded in 1979.
165. From 1851 onwards the recorded ages were supposed to be accurate and the precise places of birth were noted.
166. Examination of case notes of patients officially recorded as dying of asthma showed that many were aged over 60 and cigarette smokers.
167. Although they are anonymous subjects of the camera, their singularity is often stressed and their individual gestures carefully recorded.
168. I was ill at the time with the ague but I remember the verdict being recorded.
169. The name actually derives from a corn mill, recorded on the site in 1620, belonging to William Gunne.
170. And there were endless meetings and private conversations and arcane machinations, many never recorded.
171. McKennitt has since recorded four more albums on her own label, Quinlan Road.
172. Similarly recorded laboratory data, anthropometric measures, dietary assessments, knowledge tests, and attitudinal surveys document outcomes.
173. Interview. he sez he saw the plaque and thought he'd see what was recorded on the air disaster.
173. Sentencedict.com is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find good sentences for a large number of words.
174. There is no clear correlation between the number of injections and the degree of abnormality recorded.
175. The Anti-Defamation League has compiled hate crime statistics from law enforcement throughout the county and recorded 413 incidents from 1992-94.
176. Coleman's colourful life is recorded in his autobiography Reflections of a Racing Driver.
177. The poll also gave a popular approval rating of 39 percent for the President, the lowest ever recorded by Bush.
178. His clandestine meetings with PLO officials had been secretly recorded.
179. Commodus was proud of these accomplishments and had them recorded on official inscriptions; as a marksman he was remarkably accomplished.
180. In December 1987 this adjustment process took a further week and the final outcome is as recorded in Table 3.5.
More similar words: video recorder, record, prerecord, recording, off the record, go on record, record level, interior decorator, camcorder, recommended, economic recovery, horde, order, to order, border, ordeal, in order, on order, guarded, bearded, ordered, orderly, retarded, disorder, bordeaux, out of order, in order to, preorder, tall order, in order of.