transcender

English

Etymology

transcend + -er

Noun

transcender (plural transcenders)

  1. One who transcends.
    • 1995, Antoine Culioli, Michel Liddle, Cognition and Representation in Linguistic Theory, page v:
      British and North American practitioners tend to ignore the heirs, gainsayers and transcenders of the framework set out by Ferdinand de Saussure.

French

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin transcendo, transcendere.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /tʁɑ̃.sɑ̃.de/

Verb

transcender

  1. to transcend

Conjugation

Further reading


Portuguese

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin transcendo, transcendere (to climb over, step over, surpass, transcend). Compare Spanish trascender, French transcender.

Pronunciation

  • Hyphenation: trans‧cen‧der

Verb

transcender (first-person singular present indicative transcendo, past participle transcendido)

  1. to transcend

Conjugation


Spanish

Verb

transcender (first-person singular present transcendo, first-person singular preterite transcendí, past participle transcendido)

  1. Alternative spelling of trascender

Conjugation

  • Rule: e becomes ie in stressed syllables.
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