English-Thai Dictionary
recorder
N ผู้บันทึก เครื่องบันทึก phu-ban-tuek
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
RECORDER
n. 1. A person whose official duty is to register writings or transactions; one who enrolls or records.
2. An officer of a city who is keeper of the rolls or records, or who is invested with judicial powers.
3. Formerly, a kind of flute, flageolet or wind instrument.
The figures of recorders, flutes and pipes are straight; but the recorder hath a less bore and a greater above and below.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
RECORDER
RECORDER Re *cord "er (r *krd "r ), n.
1. One who records; specifically, a person whose official duty it is to make a record of writings or transactions.
2. The title of the chief judical officer of some cities and boroughs; also, of the chief justice of an East Indian settlement. The Recorder of London is judge of the Lord Mayor's Court, and one of the commissioners of the Central Criminal Court.
3. (Mus. )
Defn: A kind of wind instrument resembling the flageolet. [Obs. ] "Flutes and soft recorders." Milton.
RECORDERSHIP
RECORDERSHIP Re *cord "er *ship, n.
Defn: The office of a recorder.
New American Oxford Dictionary
recorder
re cord er |riˈkôrdər rəˈkɔrdər | ▶noun 1 an apparatus for recording sound, pictures, or data, esp. a tape recorder. 2 a person who keeps records: a poet and recorder of rural and industrial life. 3 a simple wind instrument with finger holes and no keys, held vertically and played by blowing air through a shaped mouthpiece against a sharp edge. 4 ( Recorder ) (in England and Wales ) a barrister appointed to serve as a part-time judge. • Brit. historical a judge in certain courts. DERIVATIVES re cord er ship |-ˌSHip |noun recorder ( sense 4 ) ORIGIN late Middle English (denoting a kind of judge ): from Anglo-Norman French recordour, from Old French recorder ‘bring to remembrance ’; partly reinforced by the verb record (also used in the obsolete sense ‘practice a tune ’: see sense 3 ).
Oxford Dictionary
recorder
re |cord ¦er |rɪˈkɔːdə | ▶noun 1 an apparatus for recording sound, pictures, or data. 2 a person who keeps records: a recorder of rural life. 3 ( Recorder ) (in England and Wales ) a barrister appointed to serve as a part-time judge. • Brit. historical a judge in certain courts. 4 a simple wind instrument without keys, held vertically and played by blowing air through a shaped mouthpiece against a sharp edge. DERIVATIVES recordership noun recorder ( sense 3 ) ORIGIN late Middle English (denoting a kind of judge ): from Anglo-Norman French recordour, from Old French recorder ‘bring to remembrance ’; partly reinforced by the verb record (also used in the obsolete sense ‘practise a tune ’: see sense 4 ).
American Oxford Thesaurus
recorder
recorder noun 1 he put a cassette in the recorder: tape recorder, cassette recorder; VCR, videocassette recorder, videotape recorder; DVD recorder, digital recorder. 2 a recorder of rural life: record keeper, archivist, annalist, diarist, chronicler, historian; rare chronologer, chronologist.
Oxford Thesaurus
recorder
recorder noun 1 tape recorder, cassette recorder; videocassette recorder, VCR, video recorder, videotape recorder, video. 2 record keeper; registrar, archivist, annalist, diarist, chronicler, historian; scribe, clerk; rare chronologer, chronologist, chronographer.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
recorder
re c ó rd er 名詞 C 1 録音 [録画 ]機器, 記録機器, レコーダー ▸ turn on [off ] a cassette [tape, video ] recorder カセット [テープ, ビデオ ]レコーダーを回す [切る ]2 〘楽 〙縦笛, リコーダー .3 〖R-; 肩書き 〗⦅英 ⦆(刑事裁判所の )非常勤判事 ; (一部の市法廷の )判事 ; ⦅米 ⦆判事 .4 記録係 .5 計測機器 .