transcribe |
to write or type a copy or full version of (something dictated or heard, shorthand notes, or the like). [4 definitions] |
transcript |
an exact copy or reproduction considered as an official record, as of court hearings, a person's academic grades, or the like. |
transcriptase |
an enzyme that is involved in the formation of RNA from DNA during transcription. |
transcription |
the act or product of transcribing. [4 definitions] |
transducer |
a device that converts energy from one form to another, such as a loudspeaker that converts electricity into sound. |
transect |
to cut across or divide by cutting across. |
transept |
the section of a church that crosses the longer, central section or nave at right angles, or either half of this section. |
transfer |
to convey or move from one place or person to another. [10 definitions] |
transferable |
combined form of transfer. |
transfer agent |
an individual, bank, or trust company that is legally designated to supervise the buying and selling of certificates on behalf of a corporation. |
transferal |
a transfer. |
transferee |
one who is transferred. [2 definitions] |
transference |
an act or process of transferring. [2 definitions] |
transfer RNA |
a small, looped RNA that brings amino acids to a developing polypeptide chain. (Cf. messenger RNA.) |
transfiguration |
the act of transforming or the state of being transformed in form or appearance, esp. to an idealized or spiritualized state. [2 definitions] |
transfigure |
to radically change the form or appearance of, esp. for the better; transform; ennoble or beautify. [2 definitions] |
transfix |
to pierce through with, or as though with, something sharply pointed; impale. [2 definitions] |
transform |
to change the form, appearance, or structure of. [5 definitions] |
transformable |
combined form of transform. |
transformation |
a significant change in the form, structure, character, or nature of something or someone. [2 definitions] |
transformational grammar |
a system of grammar that accounts for sentence and phrase structures by applying a set of transformational rules to the basic structures of a language. |