Old Testament readings use the Septuagint , the Scripture the apostles quoted. Masoretic numbering shown for reference.Learn why

register

noun
A written account or entry of acts, judgments or proceedings, for preserving and conveying to future times an exact knowledge of transactions. The word appropriately denotes an official account of the proceedings of a public body, a prince, a legislature, a court an incorporated company and the like, and in this use it is synonymous with record. But in a lax sense, it signifies any account entered on paper to preserve the remembrance of what is done.

register

The book in which a register or record is kept, as a parish register; also, a list, as the register of seamen. REGIISTER.

register

[Low L. registrarius.]

The officer or person whose business is to write or enter in a book accounts of transactions, particularly of the acts and proceedings of courts or other public bodies; as the register of a court of probate; a register of deeds.

register

In chimistry and the arts, an aperture with a lid, stopper or sliding plate, in a furnace, stovefor regulating the admission of air and the heat of the fire.

register

The inner part of the mold in which types are cast.

register

In printing, the correspondence of columns on the opposite sides of the sheet.

register

A sliding piece of wood, used as a stop in an organ. Parish register, a book in which are recorded the baptisms of children and the marriages and burials of the parish. Register ship, a ship which obtains permission to trade to the Spanish West Indies and is registered before sailing .

register

verb transitive
To record; to write in a book for preserving an exact account of facts and proceedings. The Greeks and Romans registered the names of all children born.

register

To enroll; to enter in a list.