Need another word that means the same as “register”? Find 90 synonyms and 30 related words for “register” in this overview.
The synonyms of “Register” are: registry, cash register, official list, listing, roll, roster, index, directory, catalogue, schedule, inventory, tally, calendar, record, chronicle, diary, journal, log, logbook, ledger, archive, range, area, region, reaches, sweep, read, show, file, cross-file, put on record, enter, lodge, post, set down, inscribe, write down, put in writing, submit, report, take down, note, list, enrol, put one's name down, enlist, sign on, sign up, apply, report one's arrival, record one's arrival, book oneself in, book in, indicate, display, express, exhibit, evince, betray, disclose, evidence, reveal, manifest, demonstrate, reflect, bespeak, testify to, perceive, discern, be aware of, become aware of, be aware of the fact that, become aware of the fact that, be conscious of, become conscious of, be conscious of the fact that, become conscious of the fact that, notice, make an impression, get through, sink in, fall into place, penetrate, have an effect, dawn, strike home, be understood
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “register” as a noun can have the following definitions:
archive | A depository containing historical records and documents. A section of archive film. |
area | A part of an object or surface. It was a closed area of employment. |
calendar | A chart or series of pages showing the days, weeks, and months of a particular year, or giving particular seasonal information. I have you on my calendar for next Monday. |
cash register | Prompt payment for goods or services in currency or by check. |
catalogue | A series of unwelcome or unpleasant things. A computerized library catalogue. |
chronicle | A record or narrative description of past events. A chronicle of his life during the war years. |
diary | A personal journal (as a physical object. The City Diary. |
directory | A board in an organization or large store listing names and locations of departments, individuals, etc. |
index | A set of items each of which specifies one of the records of a file and contains information about its address. The oral hygiene index was calculated as the sum of the debris and calculus indices. |
inventory | A detailed list of all the items in stock. An inventory may be necessary to see if anything is missing. |
journal | A record book as a physical object. While abroad he had kept a journal. |
ledger | A record in which commercial accounts are recorded. The total balance of the purchases ledger. |
listing | A list or catalogue. |
log | An official record of events during the voyage of a ship or aircraft. Errors late in the game cost them a shot at the log of wood. |
logbook | The registration document of a vehicle. |
official list | A worker who holds or is invested with an office. |
range | The limits within which something can be effective. He went down to the ranges to practise shooting. |
reaches | The limits within which something can be effective. He was beyond the reach of their fire. |
record | A piece or collection of music reproduced on a record or on another medium. The team preserved their unbeaten home record. |
region | The approximate amount of something usually used prepositionally as in in the region of. It was going to take in the region of two or three months to finish the job. |
registry | An official written record of names or events or transactions. Converted trawlers of local registry. |
roll | The act of rolling something as the ball in bowling. He shot his roll on a bob tailed nag. |
roster | A list of members of a team or organization, in particular of sports players available for team selection. The label assembled an extraordinarily eclectic roster of artists. |
schedule | An ordered list of times at which things are planned to occur. Information on airline schedules. |
sweep | An act of sweeping something with a brush. I was giving the floor a quick sweep. |
tally | An account kept by means of a tally. The key is so cut as to form a tally with the interior machinery. |
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “register” as a verb can have the following definitions:
apply | Apply oneself to. Please apply yourself to your homework. |
be aware of | Spend or use time. |
be aware of the fact that | Happen, occur, take place. |
be conscious of | To remain unmolested, undisturbed, or uninterrupted — used only in infinitive form. |
be conscious of the fact that | Work in a specific place, with a specific subject, or in a specific function. |
be understood | Have an existence, be extant. |
become aware of | Enter or assume a certain state or condition. |
become aware of the fact that | Enhance the appearance of. |
become conscious of | Undergo a change or development. |
become conscious of the fact that | Enhance the appearance of. |
bespeak | Speak to. The defendant s insurers took steps to bespeak his medical records. |
betray | Treacherously reveal (information. A double agent who betrayed some 400 British and French agents to the Germans. |
book in | Record a charge in a police register. |
book oneself in | Register in a hotel booker. |
catalogue | Make a catalogue compile a catalogue. The report catalogues dangerous work practices in the company. |
cross-file | Have one’s name listed as a candidate for several parties. |
dawn | Appear or develop. The awful truth was beginning to dawn on him. |
demonstrate | Take part in a public demonstration. She demonstrated how to cook chops. |
discern | Recognize or find out. She could faintly discern the shape of a skull. |
disclose | Disclose to view as by removing a cover. The auction house would not disclose the price at which the van Gogh had sold. |
display | Attract attention by displaying some body part or posing of animals. Both players displayed a great deal of spirit. |
enlist | Hire for work or assistance. He enlisted in the Royal Naval Air Service. |
enrol | Officially register as a member of an institution or a student on a course. All entrants will be enrolled on new style courses. |
enter | Set out on an enterprise or subject of study. Enter Hamlet. |
evidence | Be or show evidence of. The quality of the bracelet as evidenced by the workmanship is exceptional. |
evince | Give expression to. The news stories evinced the usual mixture of sympathy and satisfaction. |
exhibit | Give an exhibition of to an interested audience. He could exhibit a saintlike submissiveness. |
express | Serve as a means for expressing something. Italians express coffee rather than filter it. |
fall into place | Begin vigorously. |
file | File a formal charge against. The students filed into the classroom. |
get through | Attract and fix. |
have an effect | Undergo (as of injuries and illnesses. |
indicate | Indicate a place direction person or thing either spatially or figuratively. Dotted lines indicate the text s margins. |
inscribe | Carve, cut, or etch into a material or surface. A regular polygon inscribed in a circle. |
list | Give a building company etc listed status. The ship listed to starboard. |
lodge | Be a lodger stay temporarily. He has 28 days in which to lodge an appeal. |
log | Enter into a log as on ships and planes. There are plans to log 250 000 hectares of virgin rainforest. |
make an impression | Change from one form into another. |
manifest | Record in a ship s manifest. The ghost manifests each year on the same day. |
note | Make a written note of. We noted earlier the difficulties inherent in this strategy. |
notice | Notice or perceive. They were too drunk to notice. |
perceive | Interpret or regard (someone or something) in a particular way. He perceived the faintest of flushes creeping up her neck. |
post | Publicize with or as if with a poster. She posted a photo of herself with the singer on Twitter. |
put in writing | Arrange thoughts, ideas, temporal events. |
put on record | Formulate in a particular style or language. |
put one's name down | Attribute or give. |
read | Habitually read a particular newspaper or periodical. I ll read to you if you like. |
record | Make a record of set down in permanent form. They were asked to keep a diary and record everything they ate or drank. |
record one's arrival | Indicate a certain reading; of gauges and instruments. |
reflect | Be bright by reflecting or casting light. That is quite a serious accusation which reflects on all 120 members of Parliament. |
report | Cover an event or subject as a journalist or a reporter. One student reported the other to the principal. |
report one's arrival | Announce as the result of an investigation or experience or finding. |
reveal | Make visible. The truth revealed at the Incarnation. |
set down | Fix in a border. |
show | Show in or as in a picture. Her date failed to show. |
sign on | Make the sign of the cross over someone in order to call on God for protection; consecrate. |
sign up | Communicate in sign language. |
sink in | Appear to move downward. |
strike home | Attain. |
submit | Accept as inevitable. The lawyers submitted the material to the court. |
take down | Remove something concrete, as by lifting, pushing, or taking off, or remove something abstract. |
testify to | Give testimony in a court of law. |
write down | Communicate or express by writing. |
archives | Collection of records especially about an institution. |
bookmark | A strip of leather, card, or other material, used to mark one’s place in a book. Fans will want to bookmark this site. |
catalog | Make a catalogue compile a catalogue. She spends her weekends cataloguing. |
catalogue | Make a catalogue compile a catalogue. It will be some time before the collection is fully catalogued. |
compendium | A package of stationery for writing letters. An invaluable compendium of useful information about language. |
discography | A descriptive catalog of musical recordings. The factual reliability is commendable he clearly had a good discography to hand. |
document | Support or accompany with documentation. The parents documented every step of their child s development. |
documentation | Documentary validation. User documentation. |
enlist | Join the military. Hundreds of thousands of recruits had been enlisted. |
enrol | Recruit (someone) to perform a service. All entrants will be enrolled on new style courses. |
enroll | Register formally as a participant or member. |
enumerate | Specify individually. She enumerated the many obstacles she had encountered. |
evidence | Provide evidence for. There was no obvious evidence of a break in. |
file | File a formal charge against. The students filed into the classroom. |
index | Adjust through indexation. The government indexes wages and prices. |
initiation | The action of admitting someone into a secret or obscure society or group, typically with a ritual. His initiation into the world of martial arts. |
itemize | Break down (a whole) into its constituent parts. Itemize one s tax deductions. |
label | Attach a tag or label to. She labelled the parcels neatly writing the addresses in capital letters. |
list | Include or enter in a list. Local offices are listed in the phone book. |
membership | The members or the number of members in a group. Countries seeking membership of the European Union. |
ostensive | Manifestly demonstrative. |
page | The material written or printed on a page. The vote will form a page in the world s history. |
payroll | The department that determines the amounts of wage or salary due to each employee. Small employers with a payroll of less than 45 000. |
receptionist | A person who greets and deals with clients and visitors to a surgery, office, etc. |
record | Produce a programme or a piece or collection of music by recording a performance. The coroner recorded a verdict of accidental death. |
roster | Place on or assign according to a duty roster. A cluster of outstanding players on the club s roster. |
substantiation | Additional proof that something that was believed (some fact or hypothesis or theory) is correct. |
tab | Identify as being of a specified type or suitable for a specified position. Pull the tab to open the can. |
tabloid | Newspaper with half-size pages. A tabloid TV show. |
tilt | Charge with a tilt. He tilts at his prey. |
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