¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Transcriptions
1. transcription [n] - See also: transcription
Lexicographical Neighbors of Transcriptions
Literary usage of Transcriptions
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Organ Registration: A Comprehensive Treatise on the Distinctive Quality of by Everett Ellsworth Truette (1919)
"These " transcriptions " may be divided into two classes: First, those compositions
whose style and character are more or less similar to the style and ..."
2. Organ Registration: A Comprehensive Treatise on the Distinctive Quality of by Everett Ellsworth Truette (1919)
"CHAPTER XVI transcriptions MANY compositions which were originally composed ...
If the student has a desire to play " transcriptions " of the first class ..."
3. Varronianus: A Critical and Historical Introduction to the Ethnography of by John William Donaldson (1860)
"I. transcriptions of proper names the first clue to an interpretation of the
Etruscan language. § i. Names of Etruscan divinities derived and explained. ..."
4. The Art of Teaching and Studying Language by François Gouin, Howard Swan (1892)
"This is, that our transcriptions reproduce the exact text of the author, ...
Specimens of transcriptions. To make still more clear the process which we have ..."
5. Introduction to the Study of the Chinese Characters by Joseph Edkins (1876)
"OLD transcriptions, JAPANESE, COREAN, COCHIN CHINESE. ... The sixth is Japanese,
Corean, Mongolian, and Cochin Chinese transcriptions. ..."
6. Canon and Text of the Old Testament by Frants Buhl (1892)
"These transcriptions are specially valuable for this reason that they give us
... In Josephus and the LXX. the transcriptions are limited for the most part ..."
7. The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference on the by Charles George Herbermann, Edward Aloysius Pace, Condé Bénoist Pallen, Thomas Joseph Shahan, John Joseph Wynne (1913)
"... are so widely at variance with each other as to preclude any question of mere
variations in different transcriptions of one original; either Hesychius ..."