transgress
— Verb
– English
~ pass beyond (limits or boundaries)
transgress
— Verb
– English
~ spread over land, especially along a subsiding shoreline; "The sea transgresses along the West coast of the island"
transistorise
— Verb
– English
~ equip (an electronic circuit or device) with transistors
transistorize
— Verb
– English
~ equip (an electronic circuit or device) with transistors
transit
— Verb
– English
~ pass across (a sign or house of the zodiac) or pass across (the disk of a celestial body or the meridian of a place); "The comet will transit on September 11"
transit
— Verb
– English
~ cause or enable to pass through; "The canal will transit hundreds of ships every day"
transit
— Verb
– English
~ revolve (the telescope of a surveying transit) about its horizontal transverse axis in order to reverse its direction
transit
— Verb
– English
~ make a passage or journey from one place to another; "The tourists moved through the town and bought up all the souvenirs"; "Some travelers pass through the desert"
transition
— Verb
– English
~ cause to convert or undergo a transition; "the company had to transition the old practices to modern technology"
transition
— Verb
– English
~ make or undergo a transition (from one state or system to another); "The airline transitioned to more fuel-efficient jets"; "The adagio transitioned into an allegro"
transitivise
— Verb
– English
~ make transitive; "adding `out' to many verbs transitivizes them"
transitivize
— Verb
– English
~ make transitive; "adding `out' to many verbs transitivizes them"
translate
— Verb
– English
~ restate (words) from one language into another language; "I have to translate when my in-laws from Austria visit the U.S."; "Can you interpret the speech of the visiting dignitaries?"; "She rendered the French poem into English"; "He translates for the U.N."
translate
— Verb
– English
~ determine the amino-acid sequence of a protein during its synthesis by using information on the messenger RNA
translate
— Verb
– English
~ be equivalent in effect; "the growth in income translates into greater purchasing power"
translate
— Verb
– English
~ subject to movement in which every part of the body moves parallel to and the same distance as every other point on the body
translate
— Verb
– English
~ change the position of (figures or bodies) in space without rotation
translate
— Verb
– English
~ be translatable, or be translatable in a certain way; "poetry often does not translate"; "Tolstoy's novels translate well into English"
translate
— Verb
– English
~ change from one form or medium into another; "Braque translated collage into oil"
translate
— Verb
– English
~ express, as in simple and less technical language; "Can you translate the instructions in this manual for a layman?"; "Is there a need to translate the psychiatrist's remarks?"