Defn: To transmigrate. [Obs.] Sir T. Browne.
TRANSCRIBBLER
Tran*scrib"bler, n.
Defn: A transcriber; — used in contempt. He [Aristotle] has suffered vastly from the transcribblers, as all authors of great brevity necessarily must. Gray.
TRANSCRIBE
Tran*scribe", v. t. [imp. & p. p. Transcribed; p. pr. & vb. n.
Transcribing.] Etym: [L. transcribere, transcriptum; trans across,
over + scribere to write. See Scribe.]
Defn: To write over again, or in the same words; to copy; as, to transcribe Livy or Tacitus; to transcribe a letter.
TRANSCRIBER
Tran*scrib"er, n.
Defn: One who transcribes, or writes from a copy; a copier; a copyist.
TRANSCRIPT Tran"script, n. Etym: [L. transcriptum, neut. of transcriptus, p. p. transcribere. See Transcribe.]
1. That which has been transcribed; a writing or composition consisting of the same words as the original; a written copy. The decalogue of Moses was but a transcript. South.
2. A copy of any kind; an imitation. The Grecian learning was but a transcript of the Chaldean and Egyptian. Glanvill.