Pronunciation: /vərˈbeɪtɪm/
adjective used to describe something that is word-for-word the same as the original
A1 The teacher asked the students to repeat the information verbatim.
A2 She was able to recite the poem verbatim after just one read-through.
B1 The witness was able to provide a verbatim account of what happened.
B2 The journalist transcribed the interview verbatim to ensure accuracy.
C1 The lawyer quoted the legal document verbatim during the trial.
C2 The historian meticulously studied the ancient text to provide a verbatim translation.
adverb used to modify a verb, adjective, or other adverb to indicate that something is done in a word-for-word manner
A1 I copied the instructions verbatim from the manual.
A2 She repeated the poem verbatim without missing a word.
B1 The lawyer quoted the witness's statement verbatim during the trial.
B2 The journalist transcribed the interview verbatim for accuracy.
C1 The historian meticulously recorded the ancient text verbatim for preservation.
C2 The translator translated the document verbatim to maintain the original meaning.
formal The lawyer requested the witness to repeat the statement verbatim.
informal Can you please say that again word for word?
slang Spit it back exactly how they said it.
figurative He followed the recipe verbatim to ensure the dish turned out perfectly.
verbatimed
verbatim
more verbatim
most verbatim
verbatim
will verbatim
have verbatimed
is verbatiming
verbatim
verbatim
to verbatim
verbatiming
verbatimed