1. To render in another language: translated the Korean novel into German.
2. To express in different, often simpler words: translated the technical jargon into ordinary language.
3.
a. To change from one form, function, or state to another; convert or transform: translate ideas into reality.
b. To express in another medium: translated the short story into a movie.
4. To transfer from one place or condition to another: "His remains were translated to San Juan de Puerto Rico where they still rest"(Samuel Eliot Morison).
5. To forward or retransmit (a telegraphic message).
6.
a. Ecclesiastical To transfer (a bishop) to another see.
b. To convey to heaven without death.
7. Physics To subject (a body) to translation.
8. Biology To subject (messenger RNA) to translation.
v.intr.
1.
a. To make a translation.
b. To work as a translator.
2. To admit of translation: His poetry translates well.
3. To be changed or transformed in effect. Often used with into or to: "Today's low inflation and steady growth in household income translate into more purchasing power"(Thomas G. Exter).
[Middle English translaten, from Old French translater, from Latin trānslātus, past participle of trānsferre, to transfer : trāns-, trans- + lātus, brought; see telə- in Indo-European roots.]
translatable - capable of being put into another form or style or language; "substances readily translatable to the American home table"; "his books are eminently translatable"
untranslatable - not capable of being put into another form or style or language; "an untranslatable idiom"; "untranslatable art"
2.
translatable - capable of being changed in substance as if by alchemy; "is lead really transmutable into gold?"; "ideas translatable into reality"
Now an impressive pause - then the bugle sang "TAPS" - translatable, this time, into "Good-bye, and God keep us all!" for taps is the soldier's nightly release from duty, and farewell: plaintive, sweet, pathetic, for the morning is never sure, for him; always it is possible that he is hearing it for the last time.
Jeannine Coburn, PhD, assistant professor of biomedical engineering at Worcester Polytechnic Institute, will use the cells in her research into the development of clinically translatable drug delivery strategies and three-dimensional in vitro human disease models using biologically-derived biomaterials.
The company said it had achieved titratable, fine-tuned regulation of IL12 and IL15 in human T cells in vitro and in vivo with clinically translatable DDs and FDA-approved drugs.
"Shorter leukocyte telomere lengths may represent a clinically translatable biomarker for identifying individuals at increased risk of poor clinical outcomes in COPD."
Although research in mice is not directly translatable to the human condition, the kinds of stem cells that produce bone and fat in mice are the same kind that produce bone and fat in humans.
KARACHI: With the efforts of Program Management & Implementation Unit of Sindh Basic Education Program, Sindhi Language has attained status of translatable language in 102 international languages of the world on Google translate.
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