0 past simple and past participle of transcribe
1 to record something written, spoken, or played by writing it down:
Recordings of conversations are transcribed and entered into the database.
2 to change a piece of writing or music into another form, for example into a different writing system or into music for different instruments:
Interviews varied between 30 and 80 minutes in length and were subsequently transcribed for analysis.
The data analyzed were extracted from a little over 200,000 transcribed words, corresponding to approximately 20 hours of recorded material.
The tape-recorded interviews were transcribed and analysed using qualitative content analysis.
Both pieces were probably transcribed in the extant sources when the melodic transformation had already occurred.
The variants transcribed were checked for consistency in one of the early phases of the study.
After the critical incident interviews were completed and transcribed, a preliminary analysis was performed.
Speech recognizers are generally evaluated by comparing their performance on pre-recorded and manually transcribed corpora.
A corpus of seventyfive teacher and student narratives was transcribed and analysed for the broader study.