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INTERPRET |
Translate |
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TRANSLATED |
Of Translate |
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TRANSLATING |
Of Translate |
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ENCODE |
Translate into cipher |
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MISTRANSLATE |
To translate erroneously. |
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ALPINE |
Translate Nepali for “mountainous” |
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GRECIZE |
To translate into Greek. |
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TRANSLATORY |
Serving to translate; transferring. |
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IDIOMS |
Phrases that rarely translate literally |
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HIEROGLYPHICS |
Rich yogi helps translate indecipherable writing |
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CRIME |
It doesn’t pay to translate “Merci” |
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CONVERT |
To turn into another language; to translate. |
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MISRENDER |
To render wrongly; to translate or recite wrongly. |
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TURN |
To translate; to construe; as, to turn the Iliad. |
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TRANSDIALECT |
To change or translate from one dialect into
another. |
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RETRANSLATE |
To translate anew; especially, to translate back
into the original language. |
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TRAVESTY |
To translate, imitate, or represent, so as to render
ridiculous or ludicrous. |
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METEMPSYCHOSE |
To translate or transfer, as the soul, from one
body to another. |
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RENDER |
To translate from one language into another; as, to
render Latin into English. |
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ENGLISH |
To translate into the English language; to Anglicize;
hence, to interpret; to explain. |
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TRADUCE |
To translate from one language to another; as, to
traduce and compose works. |
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TRANSLATE |
To bear, carry, or remove, from one place to another;
to transfer; as, to translate a tree. |
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PARAPHRASE |
To express, interpret, or translate with latitude;
to give the meaning of a passage in other language. |
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DECIPHER |
To translate from secret characters or ciphers into
intelligible terms; as, to decipher a letter written in secret
characters. |
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CONSTRUE |
... explain the construction of; to interpret;
to translate. ... |