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.
Random good picture Not show
181. The recorded figures exaggerate the increase in victimization which is occurring, mainly because of a greater public propensity to report certain crimes.
182. Urine analysis, a red blood cell count, and blood pressure were also routinely recorded.
183. The godfather of proto-punk guitar slinging, Thunders is memorialized on this 12-cut live disc recorded in Tokyo in 1988.
184. The present site was apparently first recorded about 1939 and Aldershaw was deserted in 1947.
185. The album consists of cover versions recorded this summer at the Funny Farm.
186. Capital receipts would normally be credited to reserves and recorded in the balance sheet.
187. Distant bodies like the Pleiades were recorded with great clarity.
188. The first issue was in 130 weekly parts at 2 % d. each, but apparently no complete set is recorded.
189. Easy-to-learn performance and production techniques, together with readily accessible models in recorded form, change the way music is made.
190. Diets and water were supplied ad libitum. Food consumption was recorded every 3 days and the animals were weighed weekly.
191. Deputy Coroner Mr Pollard recorded verdicts of accidental death and said he was satisfied what had happened had been purely an accident.
192. Recorded emissions of sulphur dioxide were 2.67 million tonnes in 1992, while nitrous oxides totalled 701,645 tonnes.
193. All three works on this disc are idiomatically performed and decently, if rather drily, recorded.
194. A capital lease must be recorded on the balance sheet as a capital asset with an associated liability.
195. The human species has probably not undergone much genetic change in recorded time.
196. Henderson had recorded with a big band before -- three tunes, in fact, in 1992.
197. They sat outside local shopping centers and recorded more than 350 adults as they walked through doors that swung both ways.
198. On the second date, the short plays will be recorded in a studio with professional actors.
199. His first recorded entry into royal service was as deputy paymaster of the forces in Ireland, 1614.
200. Merseyside coroner Roy Barter recorded a verdict of death by natural causes.
201. The incriminating conversations that followed were recorded using hidden spy cameras.
202. Recommendations can be made or applications recorded easily with the device using drop-down menus and templates.
203. He rejoiced in the large numbers becoming Christians and carefully recorded them.
203. Sentencedict.com try its best to collect and build good sentences.
204. Yet recorded crime fell by one-third despite increased willingness among the police and public to institute prosecutions.
205. A variety of information can be recorded and catalogued including contacts, agencies and job applications.
206. Surprisingly little is recorded about the techniques of ship construction at that time, and the wreck may provide valuable clues.
207. Read in studio A misadventure verdict's been recorded on a man who died in hospital after being admitted with broken ribs.
208. Pritchard failed a roadside breath test which recorded 151 micrograms of alcohol in 100 millilitres of breath.
209. Such vision would be recorded as 6/60 and would indicate severely reduced visual acuity.
210. The more minor crimes are less liable to be known to the police and recorded in the statistics than are serious crimes.
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.