catalog

1 of 2

noun

cat·​a·​log ˈka-tə-ˌlȯg How to pronounce catalog (audio)
-ˌläg
variants or catalogue
1
: list, register
a catalog of the band's songs
2
a
: a complete enumeration of items arranged systematically with descriptive details
a catalog of the company's products
b
: a pamphlet or book that contains such a list
a mail-order catalog
a university catalog
c
: material in such a list

catalog

2 of 2

verb

variants or catalogue
cataloged or catalogued; cataloging or cataloguing

transitive verb

1
: to make a catalog of
catalog a collection of books
2
a
: to enter in a catalog
b
: to classify (something, such as books or information) descriptively
Scientific monographs are cataloged into a database that will be available to researchers.

intransitive verb

1
: to make or work on a catalog
2
: to become listed in a catalog at a specified price
this stamp catalogs at $2
cataloger noun
or cataloguer

Examples of catalog in a Sentence

Noun The band played many songs from their catalog of hits. a catalog of music album titles Verb They use the computer to catalog books. The chart catalogs the results of each test.
Recent Examples on the Web
Noun
That means that starting May 1, more songs will be removed from TikTok, joining the millions that have already been removed from the Universal Music Group’s catalog earlier this year. Kristin Robinson, Billboard, 26 Apr. 2024 Ensure that at least half of your content on social media and in catalogs is user-generated, and highlight that. Josh Camitta, Rolling Stone, 25 Apr. 2024 Yet labels’ and publishers’ main complaint is that the service isn’t paying enough for rights to their catalogs. August Brown, Los Angeles Times, 24 Apr. 2024 Some of its earliest catalogs showed hobnailed shoes for quarry workers and manure-proof uppers for farmers. Journal Sentinel, 24 Apr. 2024 From a humble country music beginning to multiple musical genre switches, some acting stints, and the most recent display of her entire musical catalog on the wildly successful, history-making Eras Tour, Swift, 34, is no stranger to experimentation. Tabitha Parent, Peoplemag, 20 Apr. 2024 Hipgnosis, founded in 2018, helped drive the price of music catalogs to new heights by paying top dollar to acquire catalogs from a large number of top producers and songwriters, with Mercuriadis often saying that music catalogs were as valuable an asset as oil or gold. Jem Aswad, Variety, 20 Apr. 2024 Further proceeds — including, unusually, money from the direct sale of a $,7500 limited-edition cashmere blanket through Sotheby’s — will support the catalog, educational resources and public programming like a scholarly convening in October. Jillian Steinhauer, New York Times, 13 Apr. 2024 There’s an interesting twist in the ongoing drama between TikTok and Universal Music Group, which yanked its giant catalog of music from the platform over issues around money and AI. Kylie Robison, Fortune, 12 Apr. 2024
Verb
The organization has been cataloging humpback whales since 2012, amassing 352 whales in its catalog to date, Brown said. Julia Jacobo, ABC News, 25 Apr. 2024 The very best thing about this book might be the way Quindlen, an anthropologist of domesticity, catalogs the sparklingly random moments that make up human experience. Catherine Newman, San Diego Union-Tribune, 9 Mar. 2024 Dunn, whose main job with the FWC is cataloging derelict boats, said divers must often get in the water to locate the state registration numbers off the hull of the boat. David Goodhue, Miami Herald, 26 Feb. 2024 That data is fed into a neural network that catalogs the associations between various words and phrases, which, after human training, can be used to produce responses to user queries in natural language. Dylan Sloan, Fortune, 22 Feb. 2024 Almost every item that passes through the borough’s 22 precincts must go to the basement to be numbered and cataloged to be held as evidence for a trial or wait for its rightful owner. Chelsia Rose Marcius Lanna Apisukh, New York Times, 14 Feb. 2024 Now to her ultimate dismay, the war zone has come to her home turf, and Lee confronts an existential dread over how her efforts to catalog the carnage overseas has failed to prevent America from following the same path. Randy Myers, The Mercury News, 10 Apr. 2024 Naturalists have been trying for centuries to catalog all of the species on Earth, and the effort remains one of the great unfinished jobs in science. Carl Zimmer, New York Times, 19 Feb. 2024 She is credited with naming and cataloging hundreds of native plants in the Hudson River Valley using Swedish botanist Carolus Linnaeus’ then-new binomial system of botanical nomenclature. Jessica Damiano, San Diego Union-Tribune, 24 Mar. 2024

These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'catalog.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

Word History

Etymology

Noun

Middle English cathaloge, cateloge, from Middle French catalogue, from Late Latin catalogus, from Greek katalogos, from katalegein to list, enumerate, from kata- + legein to gather, speak — more at legend

First Known Use

Noun

15th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Verb

1598, in the meaning defined at transitive sense 1

Time Traveler
The first known use of catalog was in the 15th century

Dictionary Entries Near catalog

Cite this Entry

“Catalog.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/catalog. Accessed 1 May. 2024.

Kids Definition

catalog

1 of 2 noun
cat·​a·​log
variants or catalogue
1
: a list of names, titles, or articles arranged according to a system
2
: a book or file containing a catalog

catalog

2 of 2 verb
variants or catalogue
cataloged or catalogued; cataloging or cataloguing
1
: to make a catalog of
2
: to enter in a catalog
catalog books
cataloger noun
or cataloguer
-ˈȯ-gər,
-ˈä-gər

More from Merriam-Webster on catalog

Last Updated: - Updated example sentences
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