Concept cluster: Change > Translation
v
(intransitive) To exhibit alliteration.
n
One who, or that which, alphabetizes.
n
Alternative spelling of anonymizer [(Internet) A software tool that attempts to make a user's Internet activity untraceable by acting as a proxy.]
v
(transitive, computing) To convert into ASCII or, more generally, into 7-bit data.
v
(computing, rare, chiefly US) To automatically categorize.
v
(translation studies) To translate a translated text back to the original language.
adj
translated back to the original language
n
Alternative spelling of back-translation [(translation studies, uncountable) The activity of translating a previously translated document back into the original language.]
v
(transitive) To assign a category; to divide into classes.
v
(transitive, intransitive) To add a codicil to something.
n
A codification.
n
An automated process or written aid for giving the conjugation table of verbs.
n
A translation.
v
(transitive) To add to a dictionary.
v
(rare) To produce a publication in multiple editions.
v
(transitive, archaic) To translate, adapt or render into English.
n
Synonym of white replacement theory
v
(transitive) To convert (text) to lower case.
v
(transitive) To translate using machine translation.
n
(linguistics) A kind of classifier that results in a mass noun rather than singling out a discrete unit.
v
To act as an intermediary; to translate from one context to another.
v
(programming) To categorize by placing into a namespace.
v
(grammar, transitive) To add nunation to (a word).
n
A restatement of a text in different words, often to clarify meaning.
v
To categorize; especially to limit or be limited to a particular category, role, etc.
n
Alternative spelling of rasterizer [A computer program that performs rasterization.]
n
The process of interpreting written language.
n
Alternative form of segmenter [A software program or algorithm that divides text into segments, used in corpus linguistics.]
v
(translation studies) To translate a written document out loud.
n
Synonym of submittal
n
(uncountable) The process of summarising
n
Abbreviation of translator. [A person who translates speech, text, film, or other material into a different natural language.]
v
Abbreviation of translate. [(transitive) To change spoken words or written text (of a book, document, movie, etc.) from one language to another.]
v
(archaic, transitive) To pass into another form of expression; to rephrase, to translate.
n
(obsolete) That which is traduced or translated.
n
Anything that translates information from one format into a different format.
n
(military) The process of transclassifying information.
v
To transfer the creative elements of a work into another culture or language.
v
(rare) To change or translate from one dialect into another.
n
(lexicography) Abbreviation of transferred sense. [A (usually looser) meaning of a word or phrase developed from a metaphoric application of its original signification.]
v
Abbreviation of translate. [(transitive) To change spoken words or written text (of a book, document, movie, etc.) from one language to another.]
v
(transitive) To change spoken words or written text (of a book, document, movie, etc.) from one language to another.
n
Obsolete form of translation. [The conversion of text from one language to another.]
n
One who transliterates.
n
A writer who generates innovative and highly original ideas; a writer who transforms the genre in which they write.
v
To translate word-by-word, making only syntactic adjustments, but not adapting to the idiom of the target language.
n
(literature) The changing from prose into verse, or verse into prose.
n
(obsolete) The act of translating, or rendering, from one language into another language.
n
verb, intransitive.
n
Alternative form of vt (“transitive verb”) [(grammar) verb transitive or transitive verb (often in dictionaries)]

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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