transverse

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
13
Words With Friends
15
Letters
10

Definition of transverse

11 senses · 3 parts of speech · etymology included

adj

  1. (not-comparable)Situated or lying across; side to side, relative to some defined "forward" direction; perpendicular or slanted relative to the "forward" direction; identified with movement across areas.
    “The units have transverse seats, two and three astride the passageway with single or double longitudinal seats alongside the two entrance vestibules in each car.”
    “Unlike the older trains, the new units have walk-through carriages and longitudinal rather than transverse seating.”
See all 11 definitions

adj

  1. (not-comparable)Situated or lying across; side to side, relative to some defined "forward" direction; perpendicular or slanted relative to the "forward" direction; identified with movement across areas.
    “The units have transverse seats, two and three astride the passageway with single or double longitudinal seats alongside the two entrance vestibules in each car.”
    “Unlike the older trains, the new units have walk-through carriages and longitudinal rather than transverse seating.”
  2. (not-comparable)Made at right angles to the long axis of the body.
  3. (not-comparable)(of an intersection) Not tangent, so that a nondegenerate angle is formed between the two things intersecting. (For the general definition, see Transversality (mathematics) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia .)
  4. (not-comparable, obsolete)Not in direct line of descent; collateral.

noun

  1. Anything that is transverse or athwart, such as a road or a ship's web frame.
  2. The longer, or transverse, axis of an ellipse.

verb

  1. (transitive)To lie or run across; to cross.
  2. (transitive)To traverse or thwart.
  3. (transitive)To overturn.
    “And so long shall her censures, when justly passed, have their effect: how then can they be altered or transversed, suspended or superseded, by a temporal government, that must vanish and come to nothing?”
  4. (transitive)To alter or transform.
    “In love, it is said, all stratagems are fair, and many little ladies transverse the axiom by applying it to discover the secrets of their friends.”
  5. (obsolete, transitive)To change from prose into verse, or from verse into prose.
    “Bayes: Why, thus, Sir; nothing so easy when understood; I take a book in my hand, either at home or elsewhere, for that's all one, if there be any wit in't, as there is no book but has some, I transverse it; that is, if it be prose, put it into verse, (but that takes up some time) and if it be verse, put it into prose.”

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

Late Middle English, from Latin trānsversus (“turned across; going or lying across or crosswise”). Doublet of transversal.

Words you can make from transverse

200+ playable · top: TAVERNERS (12 pts)

Best play taverners 12 points

9-letter words

1 word

8-letter words

20 words

7-letter words

53 words

6-letter words

100 words

5-letter words

25 words

Hooks

1 extension · 1 back

A single letter you can add to transverse to make another valid word.

Find your best play with transverse

See every word you can make from a set of letters that includes transverse, or browse word lists you can mine for high-scoring plays.