n
A clerk, secretary or stenographer, or scribe.
n
A bound collection of tables, illustrations etc. on any given subject.
n
text converted into a spoken or audible form
n
Alternative form of audio typist [A person who listens to a sound recording and transcribes it into text by typing.]
v
To write in, or convert into, the braille writing system.
n
A copier of a manuscript.
v
To add captions to a film or broadcast.
n
A usually alphanumeric code indicating the physical location of a book within a library.
n
(television) Text which can be displayed on a television or other video screen with suitable equipment, usually a transcription or description of audio material.
n
(computer science) A lookup table.
n
A document listing codes and their meanings.
n
(emergency medicine) A method of communicating important medical information discreetly and quickly between medical professionals and responders.
n
A person who codifies; a codifier.
n
(by extension, Internet) A page on a website identifying the details of its creation, such as the author's name and the technologies used.
n
A person who sets type; a typesetter.
n
(library science) The identification number assigned to a specific copy of a work.
n
(journalism, historical) The work of a copytaker, typing up news stories telephoned in by reporters.
n
Art produced using computer technology, as opposed to traditional art.
n
(information technology) The lack of historical information in the digital age as a direct result of outdated file formats, software, or hardware that becomes corrupt, scarce, or inaccessible as technologies evolve and data decays.
n
Alternative spelling of digitizer [A device that digitizes.]
n
A draftsman or draftswoman.
n
A subtitle that transcribes the new alternative dialogue spoken on a dubbed soundtrack, rather than translating the original dialogue.
v
To assemble a film by cutting and splicing raw footage.
n
A handwritten manuscript used by a scribe to make a handwritten copy; the original copy of what gets multiply reproduced in a copy machine.
n
Alternative spelling of facsimile [(countable) A copy or reproduction.]
n
A handwritten document that has been written neatly and correctly without scratch-outs and revisions.
n
(computing) Unique identification for public key in asymmetric cryptosystem.
n
The finished version of a software program, which is sent for duplication onto physical media to be distributed.
n
(law, obsolete) A notary or scrivener
n
Someone who uses visual art to create images for a specific purpose, such as advertising or web design; a graphic designer.
n
An artist who creates images for a specific purpose, such as advertising or web design.
n
a book or document written by hand
v
To insert subtitles inside a video file, permanently modifying it.
n
Alternative form of hard copy [A printed copy of a digital document, as opposed to a copy in electronic form.]
n
(Internet) An image with superimposed text, often humorous.
n
(Wiktionary and WMF jargon) a consistently-formatted table which is present in articles with a common subject.
n
(computing, typography) A machine, program or algorithm that justifies text by aligning it.
adv
Written by hand (with pen or pencil), rather than printed out; handwritten.
v
(archaic) To write by hand.
n
A single, original copy of a book, article, composition etc, written by hand or even printed, submitted as original for (copy-editing and) reproductive publication.
n
(business) An original instance—copy of a document, copy of a digital file (or, metonymically, the disk that contains it), stencil, or otherwise—that serves as a controlling version from which duplicates are made (such as photocopies, printouts, mimeographs, transcluded instances, static content forks, stenciling impression instances, or otherwise).
n
A software system for nonlinear editing.
n
(informal) Someone who is knowledgeable in spelling rules; someone who spells words correctly.
n
Copy (text to be typeset) containing much mathematics or similar notation.
n
A task involving lots of writing.
n
A scribe, or person who copies texts.
n
Samples of the copy and layout of a printed document for review by the author or a proofreader before mass printing.
n
A company that produces books, magazines, brochures and other texts in print or electronic form.
n
Any device that reads something.
n
The conversion into digital format of a work designed and published in an earlier era.
n
An event, typically at a public library or archive, during which historic documents are digitally scanned by volunteers
n
One who scanlates; a person who carries out scanlation.
n
A person employed to transform rough transcripts into correctly punctuated and formatted text.
n
Someone who writes; a draughtsperson; a writer for another; especially, an official or public writer; an amanuensis, secretary, notary, or copyist.
n
(obsolete) A clerk or writer.
n
(archaic) Alternative form of shorthand [A rough and rapid method of writing by substituting symbols for letters, words, etc.]
n
A small-scale publishing company.
n
A digital copy of a document, rather than a copy printed on paper.
n
Alternative form of soft copy [A digital copy of a document, rather than a copy printed on paper.]
v
To transcribe or overlay softsubs (onto a video).
n
text, often flavor text, displayed on a splash screen
n
Blank lines inserted into a message posted on the Internet so that the reader can choose whether or not to scroll down and read a spoiler.
n
(printing, historical) An editor who works with the compositor at the imposing stone to determine how material will be laid out on the page.
n
A software package that assists in creating subtitles for movies, documentaries, etc.
n
(historical) Notebooks used to collect sketches and inscriptions.
n
(computing) Software that reads text from other software that is being executed, often for the purpose of replacing the text with its translation in another language.
n
A software program that adds graphical titles to video material.
n
the typescript of a document that has carbon copies underneath
n
(derogatory, dated, rare) A poor transcriber.
n
A person who transcribes; a transcriptionist.
n
The act or process of transcribing.
n
A person who transcribes.
n
typewritten material, especially such a copy of a manuscript
v
(transitive) to set or compose written material into type
n
A line placed underneath a piece of text in order to provide emphasis or to indicate that it should be viewed in italics or (in electronic documents) that it acts as a hyperlink.
n
Publication through a vanity press.
n
(computing) Speech recognition
n
(chiefly Internet slang) An intimidatingly large block of writing, particularly one with few or no paragraph breaks.
n
Software that provides word processing functions on a computer, typically including typeface selection, line justification and other formatting, pagination, and numerous other features. Compare text editor.
n
Alternative form of word break [A point in writing where a word is split so that part of it is relegated to the next line, typically at the end of a syllable and marked with a hyphen.]
n
Alternative spelling of word processor [A device similar to a simple computer, designed for word processing.]
n
(dated) A male teacher of penmanship.
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