transcript

Something which has been transcribed; a writing or composition consisting of the same words as the original; a written copy.

Noun

  1. Something which has been transcribed; a writing or composition consisting of the same words as the original; a written copy.
    • When he had finished she held out her hand for the transcript of the message that he had already made. - 1927, Ernest Bramah, Max Carrados Mysteries:
  2. A copy of any kind; an imitation.
    • The Grecian learning was but a transcript of the Chaldean and Egyptian. - 1676, Joseph Glanvill, Against Confidence in Philosophy (in Essays on Several Important Subjects)
  3. A written version of what was said orally
    • the transcript of a trial
  4. A molecule of RNA produced by transcription.
    • Some transcripts were exclusively expressed in specific organs, such as female protarsus, whereas others were universally expressed, this varied expression profile may provide insights into the specific functions...
  5. An official certified record of a student's academic performance throughtout their course of study, including all courses taken and grades received.
    • The grading policy now specifies that all students enrolled before the spring 1982 semester in classes of less than 40 students will receive written evaluations, with either a nonletter grade (honors, pass or no credit)...

Origin

From Latin transcriptum, from transcribere.

Forms

transcripts

Related

transcribe transcription

Derived

metatranscript mistranscript multitranscript primary transcript retrotranscript selenotranscript transcriptase transcriptome transcriptomics transcriptosome

Verb

  1. To write a transcript; to transcribe.

Forms

transcripts transcripting transcripted