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View synonyms for transition

transition

[ tran-zish-uhn, -sish- ]

noun

  1. movement, passage, or change from one position, state, stage, subject, concept, etc., to another; change:

    The transition from adolescence to adulthood can be difficult.

    Synonyms: conversion, passing, changeover

  2. Music.
    1. a passing from one key to another; modulation.
    2. a brief modulation; a modulation used in passing.
    3. a sudden, unprepared modulation.
  3. a passage from one scene to another by sound effects, music, etc., as in a television program, theatrical production, or the like.
  4. Also called gen·der tran·si·tion [jen, -der tran-, zish, -, uh, n, -, sish, -]. the process by which a transgender person comes to openly express their gender identity, including changes to their way of dressing, acting, or speaking, to their pronouns, name, or legal gender marker, or to their physical characteristics via hormone therapy and surgery:

    When I began my transition, there was very little information online about testosterone.



verb (used without object)

  1. to make a transition:

    He had difficulty transitioning from enlisted man to officer.

  2. (of a transgender person) to move toward openly expressing one's gender identity, often by making changes to one's way of dressing, acting, or speaking, to one's pronouns, name, or legal gender marker, or to one's physical characteristics via hormone therapy and surgery:

    My friend is transitioning socially, but she doesn't want hormone therapy or surgery.

transition

/ trænˈzɪʃən /

noun

  1. change or passage from one state or stage to another
  2. the period of time during which something changes from one state or stage to another
  3. music
    1. a movement from one key to another; modulation
    2. a linking passage between two divisions in a composition; bridge
  4. Also calledtransitional a style of architecture that was used in western Europe in the late 11th and early 12th century, characterized by late Romanesque forms combined with early Gothic details
  5. physics
    1. any change that results in a change of physical properties of a substance or system, such as a change of phase or molecular structure
    2. a change in the configuration of an atomic nucleus, involving either a change in energy level resulting from the emission of a gamma-ray photon or a transformation to another element or isotope
  6. a sentence, passage, etc, that connects a topic to one that follows or that links sections of a written work


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Derived Forms

  • tranˈsitional, adjective
  • tranˈsitionally, adverb

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Other Words From

  • tran·si·tion·al tran·si·tion·a·ry [tran-, zish, -, uh, -ner-ee, -, sish, -], adjective

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Word History and Origins

Origin of transition1

First recorded in 1545–55; from Latin trānsitiōn-, stem of trānsitiō “passage, transit across,” from trānsit(us) “gone across” (past participle of trānsīre “to go across, pass over”; transit none ) + -iō -ion none

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Word History and Origins

Origin of transition1

C16: from Latin transitio ; see transient

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Example Sentences

When internet was working its way into society, Brazil set up a body known as the Internet Steering Committee, whose job was to smooth the transition of the internet in society and kind of improve its development.

Life transitions are moments when behavior change is abnormally easy.

From Fortune

As my colleague Maria Aspan reported yesterday, the appointment was an expected transition.

From Fortune

Anticipating this, Uber says it has earmarked $800 million to help its drivers transition to electric vehicles.

We need, at least for the transition period, natural gas to ensure a secure energy supply in Germany.

From Fortune

A second document was titled: “Gambia Reborn: A Charter for Transition from Dictatorship to Democracy and Development.”

Exactly when the transition to modern domestic creature took place, for a bird that is wild to this day, is controversial.

How did you make the transition from pro surfer to modeling?

He held intrigue for journalists converging for the transition of papal power.

Will the transition of power from one Kim to another become drenched in even more blood?

With children of finer perception the transition to a correct profile view may be carried much further.

From this condition to the state where one of the stars is so nearly dark as to be invisible, the transition is but slight.

It is merely the transition of matter into new forms—into combinations which are subject to new processes.

I consider you are at present in a transition period; in a state of fermentation; and no one knows what you are capable of doing.

So much for swearing when in grim earnest; how are we to account for it in its transition to sport and play?

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transit instrumenttransitional