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NOUN:

1. a written, typewritten, or printed copy; something transcribed or made by transcribing. 

2. an exact copy or reproduction, especially one having an official status.

3. a form of something as rendered from one alphabet or language into another.

4. a written, typed, or printed copy or manuscript made by transcribing.

5. any reproduction or copy.

6. a written, printed, or typed copy, especially a usually typed copy of dictated or recorded material.

7. an official or legal and often published copy: 
a court reporter's transcript

especially, an official copy of a student's educational record.

Examples:

a transcript of a radio program; a full transcript of the court proceedings. —Merriam-Webster.

in education (mainly US and Canadian): 

1. an official record of a student's school progress and achievements.

2. an official report supplied by a school on the record of an individual student, listing subjects studied, grades received, etc.

in scientific sense:

a sequence of RNA produced by transcription from a DNA template.

in art:

a representation (as of experience) in an art form.

Origin:

1250–1300; Middle English <Latin trānscrīptum thing copied (noun use of neuter of past participle of trānscrībere to transcribe); replacing Middle English transcrit<Old French <Latin, as above; see script. Dictionary 2: C13: from Latin transcriptum, from transcrībere to transcribe. —Dictionary.com. // 

 First Known Use of transcript: 14th century. History and Etymology for transcript: Middle English, from Anglo-French transecrit, from Medieval Latin transcriptum, from Latin, neuter of transcriptus, past participle of transcribere. —Merriam-Webster.

Sources: 1, 2.

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