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transposition
[ trans-puh-zish-uhn ]
noun
- an act of transposing.
- the state of being transposed.
- a transposed form of something.
- Genetics. the movement of a gene or set of genes from one DNA site to another.
- Photography. the process of reversing the tonality of an image, as from negative to positive.
- Mathematics. a permutation of a set of elements that interchanges two elements and leaves the remaining elements in their original positions.
transposition
/ trænsˈpɒzɪtɪv; ˌtrænspəˈzɪʃən /
noun
- the act of transposing or the state of being transposed
- something transposed
Derived Forms
- ˌtranspoˈsitional, adjective
Other Words From
- transpo·sition·al trans·pos·i·tive [trans-, poz, -i-tiv], adjective
- nontrans·po·sition noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of transposition1
Example Sentences
Interestingly, genes that mapped near the hypothetical proteins involved activities in DNA mobilization and transposition, meaning the ability to move genes into, around or out of the bacterial genome.
Gonidakis, a key champion of the August amendment to raise the threshold for constitutional changes to 60%, said educating voters on the transposition of the ballot labels will be a challenge.
“It’s basically a transposition of political and ideological fights, debates, polemical views, into the realm of a very, very primitive understanding of history and the past.”
Those connections come vibrantly alive in this script, which Smith claims “is, for the most part, a direct transposition of the Wife of Bath’s prologue and tale.”
Such street-to-stage transpositions can, and usually do, go wrong in a hundred ways.
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