recorder

[ri-kawr-der] /rɪˈkɔr dər/
noun
1.
a person who records, especially as an official duty.
2.
English Law.
  1. a judge in a city or borough court.
  2. (formerly) the legal adviser of a city or borough, with responsibility for keeping a record of legal actions and local customs.
3.
a recording or registering apparatus or device.
4.
a device for recording sound, images, or data by electrical, magnetic, or optical means.
5.
an end-blown flute having a fipple mouthpiece, eight finger holes, and a soft, mellow tone.
Origin
1275-1325; Middle English recorder wind instrument (see record, -er1), recordour legal official (< Anglo-French recordour, Old French recordeour)
British Dictionary definitions for recorders

recorder

/rɪˈkɔːdə/
noun
1.
a person who records, such as an official or historian
2.
something that records, esp an apparatus that provides a permanent record of experiments, etc
3.
short for tape recorder
4.
(music) a wind instrument of the flute family, blown through a fipple in the mouth end, having a reedlike quality of tone. There are four usual sizes: bass, tenor, treble, and descant
5.
(in England) a barrister or solicitor of at least ten years' standing appointed to sit as a part-time judge in the crown court
Derived Forms
recordership, noun
Word Origin
sense 4 probably from record (vb) in the archaic sense "to sing"
Word Origin and History for recorders

recorder

n.

"chief legal officer of a city," early 15c., from Anglo-French recordour (early 14c.), Old French recordeor "witness; storyteller; minstrel," from Medieval Latin recordator, from Latin recordari "remember" (see record (v.)).

Meaning "registering apparatus" is from 1873. The musical instrument is attested by this name from early 15c., from record (v.) in the obsolete sense of "practice a tune." Used by Shakespeare and Milton ("of flutes and soft recorders," "Paradise Lost"). The name, and the device, were rarely heard by mid-1800s, ousted by the flute, but enjoyed a revival after 1911 as an easy-to-play instrument for musical beginners.

recorders in Culture

recorder definition


A wooden flute played like a whistle. It was popular in the fourteenth through eighteenth centuries. Interest in it has been revived over the past few decades.

recorders in the Bible

(Heb. mazkir, i.e., "the mentioner," "rememberancer"), the office first held by Jehoshaphat in the court of David (2 Sam. 8:16), also in the court of Solomon (1 Kings 4:3). The next recorder mentioned is Joah, in the reign of Hezekiah (2 Kings 18:18, 37; Isa. 36:3, 22). In the reign of Josiah another of the name of Joah filled this office (2 Chr. 34:8). The "recorder" was the chancellor or vizier of the kingdom. He brought all weighty matters under the notice of the king, "such as complaints, petitions, and wishes of subjects or foreigners. He also drew up papers for the king's guidance, and prepared drafts of the royal will for the scribes. All treaties came under his oversight; and he had the care of the national archives or records, to which, as royal historiographer, like the same state officer in Assyria and Egypt, he added the current annals of the kingdom."