transcribe

ਉਤਾਰਾ ਲਉ
definition
verb
each interview was taped and transcribed
put (thoughts, speech, or data) into written or printed form.
example
A smaller portion of their literature was written in chu nom, a writing system that uses a combination of Chinese characters to 'transcribe' Vietnamese sounds.
She decides to 'transcribe' his notes on the typewriter in case anyone should ever have to read it.
I was very tired when I went to see it, which probably didn't help, but I scribbled down some notes during the screening, which I 'transcribe' for you here.
From about 1564 he began to collect and 'transcribe' manuscripts and to compose historical works, the first to be based on systematic study of public records.
The writing system Romoaji is used to 'transcribe' Japanese into the Roman alphabet.
The only thing missing is my secretary to 'transcribe' the following notes.
Massaging her temples, she sat back down at the desk and began to 'transcribe' her notes.
In adapting the work, Beethoven does not simply 'transcribe' it note for note.
Later, some people will return to their offices or hotels and 'transcribe' the words onto their computers if they can read them, others may just file away their notes.
In those early years he would frequently 'transcribe' orchestral music for the organ.
The real question is whether they accurately 'transcribe' actual government documents.
the court was adjourned so that they could 'transcribe' their notes
Finally one day Jeanne got tired of trying to 'transcribe' my notes that were scribbled on numerous bits of paper in longhand.
polymerases 'transcribe' it into a long RNA molecule
The sound, I am all too familiar with; my ability to accurately 'transcribe' it is in doubt.
Barshai 'transcribed' the Eighth Quartet for chamber orchestra under the composer's supervision.
In 1930, the composer 'transcribed' the score for two pianos.
The outcome would be a book 'transcribing' exactly what the anthropologists were told, no less and no more.
When the sun was three-fourths of the way down, I began to write, scribbling furiously to finish 'transcribing' my thoughts before the light was lost altogether and we met as a group.
The interviews were 'transcribed' verbatim, and the interviewer verified the accuracy.
She sat quietly at the table, drinking tea and 'transcribing' her notes on the interview with Jerry.
The Five Songs Without Words that follow were later 'transcribed' for violin and piano and in that guise they have been heard far more often than in vocal form.
Milhaud originally scored it for a small orchestra, then, due to its great success, 'transcribed' it for duet.
In the seminary classroom I taught relative clauses by 'transcribing' examples of Kiswahili sentences on the blackboard with their English equivalents.
Transcription can be a dodgy game: the instrument being 'transcribed' for must bear some harmonic relationship to the original.
Stein 'transcribed' the work from Husserl's shorthand in 1916.
Speech can be 'transcribed' phonetically at different levels of detail and accuracy.
All interviews were then 'transcribed' verbatim (with the exception of minor phrases such as ‘uh-huh’).
Her speeches were never 'transcribed' - at least during her stay abroad - and were never distributed adequately to the public.
The interviews were recorded on audiotape and 'transcribed' by the researcher.
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