transitory |
lasting for only a short time; brief. |
translate |
to convert (written or spoken words) into another language. [6 definitions] |
translation |
the act of translating from one language to another. [4 definitions] |
translator |
a person who converts (written or spoken words) into another language. |
transliterate |
to write (letters or words) in the corresponding characters or symbols of another alphabet. |
translocate |
to move or transfer from one place to another. |
translocation |
a movement or transference from one place to another. [3 definitions] |
translucent |
permitting the diffused passage of light, so that images on the other side cannot be seen clearly. |
transmigrate |
to pass into and be reborn in another body, as the soul of a dead person. [2 definitions] |
transmigration |
the rebirth of the soul of a dead person in another's body. (See reincarnation.) |
transmissible |
capable of being transmitted, as a disease. |
transmission |
the act or process of transmitting, or the fact or condition of being transmitted. [4 definitions] |
transmission line |
any system of conductors that transmits signals. |
transmit |
to send or convey from a source to a destination. [6 definitions] |
transmitter |
the broadcasting apparatus that generates, amplifies, and modulates radio waves and sends the signal thus produced from an antenna. [3 definitions] |
transmogrify |
to change, transform, or mutate, esp. in a grotesque or strange way. |
transmutation |
the act or process of transmuting or the state of being transmuted; transformation. [3 definitions] |
transmute |
to change into another form, substance, state, or the like; transform. |
transoceanic |
crossing or spanning an ocean. [2 definitions] |
transom |
a small, hinged window above an interior door, or the crossbar separating the two. [2 definitions] |
transonic |
close to the speed of sound; moving at a speed that is between subsonic and supersonic. |