transpose
21transpose — To transfer one tissue or organ to the place of another and vice versa. [L. trans pono, pp. positus, to place across, transfer] * * * trans·pose tran(t)s pōz vb, trans·posed; trans·pos·ing vt to transfer from one place or period to another specif …
22transpose — Synonyms and related words: adapt, alternate, arrange, assign, bandy, be quits with, carry over, change, communicate, commute, compensate, compose, consign, convert, cooperate, counterchange, deliver, deport, diffuse, disseminate, evert, exchange …
23transpose — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. exchange, interchange, reverse, rearrange, invert; substitute, transliterate; change. See inversion, music. II (Roget s IV) v. Syn. interchange, reverse, transfer; see change 1 , exchange 1 . III… …
24transpose — trans|pose [trænˈspəuz US ˈspouz] v [T+ into/to] technical [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: transposer, from Latin transponere to change the position of , from ponere to put ] 1.) formal to change the order or position of two or more… …
25transpose — see POSITION …
26transpose — trans·pose || træns pəʊz v. rearrange, reorder, interchange, relocate …
27transpose — patroness …
28transpose — verb 1》 cause to exchange places. 2》 transfer to a different place or context. ↘write or play (music) in a different key from the original. noun Mathematics a matrix obtained from a given matrix by interchanging rows and columns. Derivatives… …
29transpose — v. a. Change the order of (by putting one in place of the other, or substituting one for the other) …
30transpose — verb (T) technical 1 formal to change the order or position of two or more things 2 to write or perform a piece of music in a musical key 1 (4) that is different from the one that it was first written in transposition noun (C, U) …