Meaning
- Verbatim means "word for word," exactly as originally spoken or written, without any change.
- It can be used as both an adverb (“to repeat something verbatim”) and an adjective (“a verbatim copy”).
Grammar and Usage
-
Adverb: placed after the verb or at the end of a clause.
- Example: “He repeated the speech verbatim.”
-
Adjective: placed before a noun.
- Example: “She made a verbatim report of the conversation.”
Structures
- repeat/quote/report something verbatim
- a verbatim copy/transcript/report
Common Phrases
- verbatim report
- quote verbatim
- verbatim copy
- repeat verbatim
Collocations
- Verbs + verbatim: quote verbatim, repeat verbatim, record verbatim
- Nouns + verbatim: verbatim transcript, verbatim account, verbatim quotation
Examples
- She wrote down the teacher’s instructions verbatim.
- The witness gave a verbatim account of what happened.
- He quoted the article verbatim during his presentation.
- Journalists often take verbatim notes during press conferences.
- Please provide a verbatim copy of the contract.
- The student was accused of copying verbatim from the textbook.
- I need a verbatim transcript of the meeting.
- His speech was broadcast verbatim on the radio.
Synonyms or Related
- word for word
- exactly
- literally
- directly
Antonym
- paraphrased
- summarized
- rephrased