S: (n) record (anything (such as a document or a phonograph record or a photograph) providing permanent evidence of or information about past events) "the film provided a valuable record of stage techniques"
S: (n) casebook (a book in which detailed written records of a case are kept and which are a source of information for subsequent work)
S: (n) chronology (a record of events in the order of their occurrence)
S: (n) timeline (a sequence of related events arranged in chronological order and displayed along a line (usually drawn left to right or top to bottom))
S: (n) dossier (a collection of papers containing detailed information about a particular person or subject (usually a person's record))
S: (n) entry (an item inserted in a written record)
S: (n) Congressional Record (a published written account of the speeches and debates and votes of the United States Congress)
S: (n) Hansard (the official published verbatim report of the proceedings of a parliamentary body; originally of the British Parliament) "the Canadian Hansard is published in both English and French"
S: (n) pony, trot, crib (a literal translation used in studying a foreign language (often used illicitly))
S: (n) retroversion (translation back into the original language) "the teacher translated Latin texts into English which he gave to his students for retroversion"
S: (n) subtitle, caption (translation of foreign dialogue of a movie or TV program; usually displayed at the bottom of the screen)
S: (n) supertitle, surtitle (translation of the words of a foreign opera (or choral work) projected on a screen above the stage)
S: (n) worksheet (a piece of paper recording work planned or done on a project)
S: (n) file, data file (a set of related records (either written or electronic) kept together)
S: (n) computer file ((computer science) a file maintained in computer-readable form)
S: (n) backup file ((computer science) a computer file dedicated to storing and updating computer backups)
S: (n) binary file ((computer science) a computer file containing machine-readable information that must be read by an application; characters use all 8 bits of each byte)
S: (n) master file, main file ((computer science) a computer file that is used as the authority in a given job and that is relatively permanent)
S: (n) disk file ((computer science) a computer file stored on a magnetic disk and identified by a unique label)
S: (n) transaction file, detail file ((computer science) a computer file containing relatively transient data about a particular data processing task)
S: (n) input file, input data ((computer science) a computer file that contains data that serve as input to a device or program)
S: (n) output file ((computer science) a computer file that contains data that are the output of a device or program)
S: (n) read-only file ((computer science) a file that you can read but cannot change)
S: (n) text file, document ((computer science) a computer file that contains text (and possibly formatting instructions) using seven-bit ASCII characters)
S: (n) web page, webpage (a document connected to the World Wide Web and viewable by anyone connected to the internet who has a web browser)
S: (n) ASCII text file (a text file that contains only ASCII characters without special formatting)
S: (n) source code (program instructions written as an ASCII text file; must be translated by a compiler or interpreter or assembler into the object code for a particular computer before execution)
S: (n) mug file, mug book (a file of mug shots (pictures of criminals that are kept on file by the police))
S: (n) history, account, chronicle, story (a record or narrative description of past events) "a history of France"; "he gave an inaccurate account of the plot to kill the president"; "the story of exposure to lead"
S: (n) case history (detailed record of the background of a person or group under study or treatment)
S: (n) family history (part of a patient's medical history in which questions are asked in an attempt to find out whether the patient has hereditary tendencies toward particular diseases)
S: (n) Parallel Lives (a collection of biographies of famous pairs of Greeks and Romans written by Plutarch; used by Shakespeare in writing some of his plays)
S: (n) recital (a detailed account or description of something) "he was forced to listen to a recital of his many shortcomings"
S: (n) working papers (records kept of activities involved in carrying out a project) "the auditor was required to produce his working papers"