Record in a sentence as a noun

It's not like the PDF downloads were copies of record.

These are little belt packs you carry around while wired-up and that record your ECG for 24-48 hours at a time.

From CTO of 10genFirst, I tried to find any client of ours with a track record like this and have been unsuccessful.

Poll is missing option: "I never used GoDaddy to begin with because of their bad track record"

If you meet probation terms such as random drug testing and so forth, then your conviction record is "erased".

Also, the stigma of having a criminal record sticks to you forever.

Look at the fact that they issued a record 10000+ 483s in 2011[9], which threaten a business with civil or criminal penalties.

Record in a sentence as a verb

Google Reader kept the content of RSS feeds cached forever, meaning it was the last surviving record of a huge number of dead and deleted blogs.

In DPR's message confirming the deal, DPR included a transacation record reflecting the transfer of 1,670 Bitcoins to a certain Bitcoin address.

How many were entirely unaware of the US government's terrible record of following international law?

Politicians need to understand that if they take on the internet and choose record labels over their own constituents they cannot expect support from their own political base.

I'm told that CS enrollments are now at record highs, past even the numbers we saw during the dotcom era; perhaps the answer is that there is no barrier, and we're about to get flooded with supply.

There was a designer from Expo, a primary contractor and subcontractors for tiling, painting, etc. a project workbook containing all the documents, including the design, and a logbook for every contractor to record their visit.

Record definitions

noun

anything (such as a document or a phonograph record or a photograph) providing permanent evidence of or information about past events; "the film provided a valuable record of stage techniques"

noun

sound recording consisting of a disk with a continuous groove; used to reproduce music by rotating while a phonograph needle tracks in the groove

See also: disk disc platter

noun

the number of wins versus losses and ties a team has had; "at 9-0 they have the best record in their league"

noun

the sum of recognized accomplishments; "the lawyer has a good record"; "the track record shows that he will be a good president"

noun

a compilation of the known facts regarding something or someone; "Al Smith used to say, `Let's look at the record'"; "his name is in all the record books"

See also: book

noun

an extreme attainment; the best (or worst) performance ever attested (as in a sport); "he tied the Olympic record"; "coffee production last year broke all previous records"; "Chicago set the homicide record"

noun

a document that can serve as legal evidence of a transaction; "they could find no record of the purchase"

noun

a list of crimes for which an accused person has been previously convicted; "he ruled that the criminal record of the defendant could not be disclosed to the court"; "the prostitute had a record a mile long"

verb

make a record of; set down in permanent form

See also: enter

verb

register electronically; "They recorded her singing"

See also: tape

verb

indicate a certain reading; of gauges and instruments; "The thermometer showed thirteen degrees below zero"; "The gauge read `empty'"

See also: read register show

verb

be aware of; "Did you register any change when I pressed the button?"

See also: register

verb

be or provide a memorial to a person or an event; "This sculpture commemorates the victims of the concentration camps"; "We memorialized the Dead"

See also: commemorate memorialize memorialise immortalize immortalise