From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishrenditionren‧di‧tion /renˈdɪʃən/ noun 1 [countable usually singular, uncountable]APMAPT someone’s performance of a play, piece of music etc He gave a moving rendition of Lennon’s ‘Imagine’.2 [countable]ALTRANSLATE a translation of a piece of writingrendition of an English rendition of a Greek poem
Examples from the Corpus
rendition• But before we left, Jeff gave an amazingly loud and accurate rendition of the barred owl.• He was a celebrity because of it, stopped often by people and asked for another rendition.• Later, your teen-ager and her hunky guy practice a hip rendition of a cool new dance.• My rendition of Parma climbing to Ambadji was to become a popular set-piece for evening entertainment.• Vaughn's rendition of "Body and Soul" won the competition.• Further, the Fugitive Slave Act specifically provided for the rendition of runaways in the northwestern and southwestern territories.Origin rendition (1600-1700) Early French, from rendre; → RENDER