register

A formal recording of names, events, transactions, etc.

Noun

  1. A formal recording of names, events, transactions, etc.
    • The teacher took the register by calling out each child's name.
  2. A book of such entries.
    • As you have one eye upon my follies, […] turn another into the register of your own. - c. 1597 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Merry Wiues of Windsor”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, &...
  3. An entry in such a book.
  4. The act of registering.
  5. A certificate issued by the collector of customs of a port or district to the owner of a vessel, containing the description of a vessel, its name, ownership, and other material facts. It is kept on board the vessel, to be used as evidence of nationality or as a muniment of title.
  6. One who registers or records; a registrar; especially, a public officer charged with the duty of recording certain transactions or events.
    • a register of deeds
  7. A distinct horizontal (or, more rarely, vertical) section of a work of art or inscription that is divided into several such sections.
    • The division of the field into an upper and lower register, with decorative motifs in the upper register and a scene with figures in the lower register, as here, is, as has been mentioned, characteristic of Syrian seals...
    • The east wall is decorated in raised relief with two registers of scenes above a dado showing a northward fecundity figure procession. - 1989, Eleni Vassilika, Ptolemaic Philae, page 76:
    • The reverse side is divided into three registers. In the first register is the name of Narmer represented as a fish and a chisel inscribed in the serekh. - 2005, Abeer El-Shahawy, The Egyptian Museum in Cairo: A Walk...
  8. A device that automatically records a quantity.
  9. The part of a telegraphic apparatus that automatically records the message received.
  10. A list of received calls in a phone set.
  11. A small unit of very fast memory that is directly accessible to the central processing unit, and is mostly used to store inputs, outputs, or intermediate results of computations.
    • When the microprocessor decodes the JSR opcode, it stores the operand into the TEMP register and pushes the current contents of the PC ($00 0128) onto the stack. - 1992, Michael A. Miller, The 68000 Microprocessor...
    • If you can trace back through the disassembly to where the variable is first loaded into a register, you can often discover its value or its address by inspecting that register. - 2014, Jason Gregory, Game Engine...
  12. The exact alignment of lines, margins, and colors.

Origin

From Medieval Latin registrum, from Late Latin regesta (“list, items recorded”), from Latin regerō (“to record, to carry back”), from re- + gerō (“to carry, bear”). Compare Latin registoria (“a treasurer”). Some senses influenced by association with unrelated Latin regō (“to rule”).

Forms

registers registre

Hyponyms

cash register parish register

Derived

bell register branch register caregiver register cash register companies register company register electoral register enregister Federal Register flageolet register flute register georegister index register land register metaregister nonconformist register nonregister parish register pen register property register quantum register quregister register file register grate

Verb

  1. To enter in a register; to enlist.

    Synonyms: enroll put down catalogue enlist induct enscroll put on register tabulate

  2. To sign-up, especially to vote.
    • I am running for President to take this country in a new direction. But I can’t do it alone. I need you. Whether it’s the first time, or the first time in a long time, I need you to register and vote on November 4th. -...
  3. To record, especially in writing.
    • Tottenham, who lost William Gallas to injury before the end, struggled to find any sort of response and did not register a single shot on target. - 2011 November 3, Chris Bevan, “Rubin Kazan 1 - 0 Tottenham”, in BBC...
    • In every way dinner proved up beyond my expectations, and I registered a note that the cook, whoever or whatever he might be, was a capable man at his trade. - 1914, Jack London, chapter VII, in The Mutiny of the...
  4. To buy the full version of trial software by providing one's details and payment.
    • This is a trial version, and will expire in 30 days. Please register!
  5. To express outward signs.
    • Members of Boston's lesbian and gay community participated in the protest to register anger at the hotel's exploitative treatment of women workers. - 1987 December 13, Elizabeth Pincus, “Copping To The Mop Scandal”, in...
  6. To record officially and handle specially.
  7. To make or adjust so as to be properly or precisely aligned.
  8. To place one's name, or have one's name placed in a register.
    • They registered for school.
  9. To make an impression.
    • You’re not listening. You’ve gone off inside your head on one of your riffs and the plain fact that your son is ill hasn’t even registered. The plain fact that I have to wake up every morning and listen to him...
  10. To be in proper alignment; to align or correspond exactly.
    • The slightly smaller hind print may overlap but seldom registers precisely in the front track. - 1974, Robert Elman, The Hunter's Field Guide to the Game Birds and Animals of North America, →ISBN:
    • […] but cat tracks are slightly more staggered, and on each side the back foot registers directly on the track of the front foot. - 1992, Dwight R. Schuh, Bowhunter's Encyclopedia: Practical, Easy-to-Find Answers to...
  11. To voluntarily sign over for safe keeping, abandoning complete ownership for partial.
  12. To perceive or comprehend; pick up on.
    • I did not register that look to mean anything more than an innocent, friendly smile.

Forms

registers registering registered registre

Synonyms

reserve schedule enroll book

Antonyms

unregister deregister

Related

registrar registration

Derived

autoregister auto-register coregister deregister direct registering inregister mass register misregister nonregistered nonregistering preregister registerable registerability registered trademark registeree registerer registrable registration registree reregister self-registering unregister unregistered