From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishlog bookˈlog book noun [countable] 1 British EnglishTTC an official document containing details about a vehicle and the name of its owner2 TTWRECORDan official record of events, especially on a journey in a ship or plane
Examples from the Corpus
log book• Sometimes, they also must present a log book that verifies their experience.• And here in Hatton's log book was the Leeds trip confirmed.• I wish to apply for the log book to retain the original suffix.• Leese and I went to the operations tent to drop off the dash-twelve page from the log book.• He wrote long outlandish tales about himself in the log book and signed them Anon.• She puts the folder down and picks up the log book.• Hence you can store dive profiles on print out copies for your log book.From Longman Business Dictionarylog bookˈlog book [countable]1an official detailed record of somethingdifferences between driving times entered on log books and on drivers’ pay slips2British English an official document containing details about a vehicle and the name of its owner → book