| enroll | | |
| v. (social) | 1. enrol, enroll, enter, inscribe, recruit | register formally as a participant or member.; "The party recruited many new members" |
| ~ muster in, draft, enlist | engage somebody to enter the army. |
| ~ unionise, unionize | recruit for a union or organize into a union.; "We don't allow people to come into our plant and try to unionize the workers" |
| ~ register | enroll to vote.; "register for an election" |
| ~ matriculate | enroll as a student. |
| ~ register | record in writing; enter into a book of names or events or transactions. |
| registration | | |
| n. (act) | 1. enrollment, enrolment, registration | the act of enrolling. |
| ~ incoming, entering, ingress, entrance, entry | the act of entering.; "she made a grand entrance" |
| n. (group) | 2. enrollment, registration | the body of people (such as students) who register or enroll at the same time. |
| ~ body | a group of persons associated by some common tie or occupation and regarded as an entity.; "the whole body filed out of the auditorium"; "the student body"; "administrative body" |
| n. (communication) | 3. registration | a document certifying an act of registering. |
| ~ certificate, credential, credentials, certification | a document attesting to the truth of certain stated facts. |
| n. (attribute) | 4. registration | (music) the sound property resulting from a combination of organ stops used to perform a particular piece of music; the technique of selecting and adjusting organ stops. |
| ~ sound property | an attribute of sound. |
| ~ music | an artistic form of auditory communication incorporating instrumental or vocal tones in a structured and continuous manner. |
| n. (act) | 5. adjustment, readjustment, registration | the act of adjusting something to match a standard. |
| ~ calibration, standardisation, standardization | the act of checking or adjusting (by comparison with a standard) the accuracy of a measuring instrument.; "the thermometer needed calibration" |
| ~ alignment | the act of adjusting or aligning the parts of a device in relation to each other. |
| ~ collimation | the accurate adjustment of the line of sight of a telescope. |
| ~ temperament | an adjustment of the intervals (as in tuning a keyboard instrument) so that the scale can be used to play in different keys. |
| ~ tune-up | adjustments made to an engine to improve its performance. |
| ~ synchronising, synchronisation, synchronization, synchronizing | an adjustment that causes something to occur or recur in unison. |
| ~ voicing | the act of adjusting an organ pipe (or wind instrument) so that it conforms to the standards of tone and pitch and color. |
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