From the entry:
- A formal recording of names, events, transactions etc.
- A book of such entries.
- An entry in such a book.
Does this sound redundant to anyone else? Isn't definition #1 the same as #3? — This comment was unsigned.
- Not at all. One and two seem almost redundant to me, split out to make the distinction between a paper register and an electoronic one, perhaps. --Connel MacKenzie 20:04, 16 October 2006 (UTC)
Could somebody state the antonym to the verb "to register"?
editI believed for a long time that the antonym of register is deregister. However, equally many sources seem to state unregister as the antonym. What is correct? Please help a non-native English speaker. Bernburgerin 10:02, 24 September 2008 (UTC)
- Both seem OK to me. They both seem current and mostly seem to be used in the same way. DCDuring TALK 11:47, 25 September 2008 (UTC)
Derived terms
edit- bell register
- branch register
- caregiver register
- companies register
- co-register
- electoral register
- flageolet register
- gross register ton
- land register
- net register ton
- nonconformist register
- pen register
- property register
- register grate
- register plate
- register ton
- register variable
- shift register
- unlimited register machine
- whistle register