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Word Meanings - JOURNAL - Book Publishers vocabulary database

Daily; diurnal. Whiles from their journal labors they did rest. Spenser.

Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of JOURNAL)

Possible antonyms: (opposite words of JOURNAL)

Related words: (words related to JOURNAL)

  • CHRONICLE
    The two canonical books of the Old Testament in which immediately follow 2 Kings. Syn. - Register; record; annals. See History. (more info) 1. An historical register or account of facts or events disposed in the order of time. 2. A narrative of
  • SUPPRESSOR
    One who suppresses.
  • REGISTERING
    Recording; -- applied to instruments; having an apparatus which registers; as, a registering thermometer. See Recording.
  • MEMOIR; MEMOIRS
    1. A memorial account; a history composed from personal experience and memory; an account of transactions or events (usually written in familiar style) as they are remembered by the writer. See History, 2. 2. A memorial of any individual;
  • JOURNALIST
    1. One who keeps a journal or diary. Mickle. 2. The conductor of a public journal, or one whose business it to write for a public journal; an editorial or other professional writer for a periodical. Addison.
  • RECORDATION
    Remembrance; recollection; also, a record. Shak.
  • REGISTERSHIP
    The office of a register.
  • JOURNAL
    Daily; diurnal. Whiles from their journal labors they did rest. Spenser.
  • RECORDER
    A kind of wind instrument resembling the flageolet. "Flutes and soft recorders." Milton. (more info) 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
  • SUPPRESSION
    Complete stoppage of a natural secretion or excretion; as, suppression of urine; -- used in contradiction to retention, which signifies that the secretion or excretion is retained without expulsion. Quain. (more info) 1. The act of suppressing,
  • RECORDERSHIP
    The office of a recorder.
  • RECORD
    L. recordari to remember; pref. re- re- + cor, cordis, the heart or 1. To recall to mind; to recollect; to remember; to meditate. "I it you record." Chaucer. 2. To repeat; to recite; to sing or play. They longed to see the day, to hear the lark
  • RECORDING
    Keeping a record or a register; as, a recording secretary; -- applied to numerous instruments with an automatic appliance which makes a record of their action; as, a recording gauge or telegraph.
  • SUPPRESSIVE
    Tending to suppress; subduing; concealing.
  • RECORDANCE
    Remembrance.
  • JOURNALISM
    1. The keeping of a journal or diary. 2. The periodical collection and publication of current news; the business of managing, editing, or writing for, journals or newspapers; as, political journalism. Journalism is now truly an estate of the realm.
  • JOURNALISTIC
    Pertaining to journals or to journalists; contained in, or characteristic of, the public journals; as journalistic literature or enterprise.
  • SUPPRESSIBLE
    That may be suppressed.
  • NARRATIVE
    1. Of or pertaining to narration; relating to the particulars of an event or transaction. 2. Apt or inclined to relate stories, or to tell particulars of events; story-telling; garrulous. But wise through time, and narrative with age. Pope.
  • INSUPPRESSIBLE
    That can not be suppressed or concealed; irrepressible. Young. -- In`sup*press"i*bly, adv.
  • INSUPPRESSIVE
    Insuppressible. "The insuppressive mettle of our spirits." Shak.
  • CASH REGISTER
    A device for recording the amount of cash received, usually having an automatic adding machine and a money drawer and exhibiting the amount of the sale.
  • PRECORDIAL
    Situated in front of the heart; of or pertaining to the præcordia.
  • JOURNALIZE
    To enter or record in a journal or diary. Johnson.
  • SELF-REGISTERING
    Registering itself; -- said of any instrument so contrived as to record its own indications of phenomena, whether continuously or at stated times, as at the maxima and minima of variations; as, a self-registering anemometer or barometer.
  • ADJOURNAL
    Adjournment; postponement. "An adjournal of the Diet." Sir W. Scott.
  • IRRECORDABLE
    Not fit or possible to be recorded.

 

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