Translate vs Transcend - What's the difference?
translate | transcend |
(label) To change text (as of a book, document, movie) from one language to another.
(label) To change text from one language to another; to have a translation into another language.
(label) To change from one form or medium to another.
* Shakespeare
* Macaulay
(label) To change from one form or medium to another.
To subject a body to linear motion with no rotation.
To transfer, to move from one place or position to another.
To transfer a holy relic from one shrine to another.
* Evelyn
To transfer a bishop from one see to another.
* Camden.
*'>citation
To ascend, to rise to Heaven without bodily death.
* Heb. xi. 5.
To entrance, to cause to lose sense or recollection.
To rearrange a song from one genre to another.
(label) To cause to move from one body part to another, as of disease.
A set of points obtained by'' adding a ''given'' fixed vector to each point ''of'' a ''given set.
to pass beyond the limits of something.
* Francis Bacon
to surpass, as in intensity or power; to excel.
* Dryden
(obsolete) To climb; to mount.
In transitive terms the difference between translate and transcend
is that translate is to change from one form or medium to another while transcend is to surpass, as in intensity or power; to excel.As a noun translate
is a set of points obtained by adding a given fixed vector to each point of a given set.translate
English
Verb
(translat)Usage notes
"Translation" is often used loosely to describe any act of conversion from one language into another, although formal usage typically distinguishes "interpretation" as the proper term for conversion of speech. Conversion of text from one orthography to another (attempting to roughly establish equivalent sound) is distinguished as "transliteration", whereas translation attempts to establish equivalent meaning. "Literal", "verbatim", or "word-for-word translation" ("metaphrase") aims to capture as much of the exact expression as possible, while "loose" or "free translation" or "paraphrase" aims to capture the general sense or artistic affect of the original text. At a certain point, however, text which has been too freely translated may be considered an "adaptation" instead.Synonyms
*Derived terms
{{der3, translation , translator , translatory , translatable , translatability , translative , translatives , translational , translationally}}Noun
(en noun)Anagrams
* ----transcend
English
Verb
(en verb)- such popes as shall transcend their limits
- How much her worth transcended all her kind.
- lights in the heavens transcending the region of the clouds
- (Howell)