If you're an English native speaker, do you ever use the word "minute" as a verb¹ to mean taking notes at a meeting?

A — I do
B — I would use the word, but that context normally doesn't come up in my life
C — I would not, because that meaning is archaic

(Boosts appreciated.)

¹ Emphasis on "as a verb". An example sentence would be to say "could you join us to minute the conversation?"

A
31.5%
B
22.6%
C
46%
Poll ended at .
@xahteiwi
when talking about someone sure "this is [blank], they're going to minute the meeting" I've heard that said and would say it myself. But asking a person to minute sounds weird.

@duckwhistle Oh, interesting. So being put forward to minute is more common than being asked politely?

That would explain why so many people hate doing it…

@xahteiwi
No this is when the minute taker has already been decided, and someone who just arrived gets told why this other random person is in the room. Especially if they're not going to be taking much part in the discussion.
@duckwhistle Okay, so prior to said decision, how would you ask someone to take the minutes?
@xahteiwi
just "Could you take the minutes please?"