You have been out-voted and ruled over: From now on and henceforth, on FFL, a transcript means any written record of a speech, debate, or a discussion; and shall not be used as a legal document in any case law; or submitted to a school board as a record of grades and course completed. To reiterate: A transcript is any written record of a speech, debate, or discussion. There are no legal documents on this chat site. Case closed. Now take you seat, Ms Stein!
On Sun, Mar 16, 2014 at 1:42 PM, <authfri...@yahoo.com> wrote: > > > A transcript is a complete, verbatim written record of everything that was > said, without narrative interpolations (except perhaps for "[laughter]" > or "[applause]"). > > > > From now on and henceforth, on FFL, a transcript means any written record > of a speech, debate, or a discussion; and shall not be used as a legal > document in any case law; or submitted to a school board as a record of > grades and course completed. To reiterate: A transcript is any written > record of a speech, debate, or discussion. There are no legal documents > on this chat site. Case closed. > > > > On 3/16/2014 10:45 AM, authfriend@... wrote: > > A transcript is a complete, verbatim written record of everything that was > said, without narrative interpolations (except perhaps for "[laughter]" > or "[applause]"). > > > A transcript is a complete, verbatim written record of everything that was > said, without narrative interpolations (except perhaps for "[laughter]" > or "[applause]"). > > You are overruled 2-1: On FFL and most other discussion groups, a > transcript means any written record of a speech, debate, or discussion, not > a legal document. Sorry, you don't make the rules around here. Now take > your seat, Ms Stein. > > > >