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Definition of Logbook
1. Noun. A book in which the log is written.
Definition of Logbook
1. Noun. A book in which events are recorded (logged), as a ship logbook that hold records of the voyage. ¹
2. Noun. (British) A record of the ownership, and licensing of a motor car ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Logbook
1. a record book of a ship or aircraft [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Logbook
Literary usage of Logbook
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Energy: Light, Heat & Sound by Don Robison, Jo Ellen Moor (1998)
"logbook entries allow the teacher to catch misunderstandings right away and ...
Two Types of logbooks The Class logbook A class logbook is completed by the ..."
2. Animals Without Backbones by Jo Ellen Moore (1998)
"logbook entries allow the teacher to catch misunderstandings right away and ...
Two Types of logbooks The Class logbook A class logbook is completed by the ..."
3. Plants by Jo Ellen Moor (1998)
"logbook entries allow the teacher to catch misunderstandings right away and ...
Two Types of logbooks The Class logbook A class logbook is completed by the ..."
4. Readings in English History Drawn from the Original Sources: Intended to by Edward Potts Cheyney (1922)
"Some extracts from his logbook are here given. The queen was then living at
Greenwich, and the expedition was watched by her and her court as it sailed down ..."
5. History of the Northern Pacific Railroad by Eugene Virgil Smalley (1883)
"... the Ship Columbia—Captain Kendrick's Discovery —Vancouver's Mistake—Gray Sails
into the Columbia River—His logbook Entry- Expedition of the British Brig ..."
6. Water by Jo Ellen Moor (1998)
"logbook entries allow the teacher to catch misunderstandings right away and then
... Two Types of logbooks _^^_^__ The Class logbook A class logbook is ..."
7. Habitats by Jo Ellen Moore (1998)
"logbook entries allow the teacher to catch misunderstandings right away and ...
Two Types of logbooks The Class logbook A class logbook is completed by the ..."