adjective1.lying or extending across or in a cross direction; cross.2.(of a Flute) having a mouth hole in the side of the tube, near its end, across which the player's breath is directed.Compare end-blown.3.(of an automotive engine) mounted with the crankshaft oriented sideways.-noun4.something that is transverse.5.Nautical. web frame.6.Geometry. transverse axis.7.a city road that cuts through a park or other area of light traffic; shortcut.Use transverse in a SentenceSee images of transverseSearch transverse on the WebOrigin:
1610-20; < L trÄnsversus going or lying across, athwart. See traverse
-Related formstrans·verse·ly, adverbsub·trans·verse, adjectivesub·trans·verse·ly, adverb
adjective1.lying or extending across or in a cross direction; cross.2.(of a Flute) having a mouth hole in the side of the tube, near its end, across which the player's breath is directed.Compare end-blown.3.(of an automotive engine) mounted with the crankshaft oriented sideways.-noun4.something that is transverse.5.Nautical. web frame.6.Geometry. transverse axis.7.a city road that cuts through a park or other area of light traffic; shortcut.Use transverse in a SentenceSee images of transverseSearch transverse on the WebOrigin:
1610-20; < L trÄnsversus going or lying across, athwart. See traverse
-Related formstrans·verse·ly, adverbsub·trans·verse, adjectivesub·trans·verse·ly, adverb
adjective1.lying or extending across or in a cross direction; cross.2.(of a Flute) having a mouth hole in the side of the tube, near its end, across which the player's breath is directed.Compare end-blown.3.(of an automotive engine) mounted with the crankshaft oriented sideways.-noun4.something that is transverse.5.Nautical. web frame.6.Geometry. transverse axis.7.a city road that cuts through a park or other area of light traffic; shortcut.Use transverse in a SentenceSee images of transverseSearch transverse on the WebOrigin:
1610-20; < L trÄnsversus going or lying across, athwart. See traverse
-Related formstrans·verse·ly, adverbsub·trans·verse, adjectivesub·trans·verse·ly, adverb
If you mean transverse or sideways, yes.If you mean transverse or sideways, yes.
no
what does this mean: Mild Myelomalacia consistant with history of transverse myelitis
Transverse means acting, lying, or being across: set crosswise
If you mean "transverse" waves, then any electromagnetic wave is transverse- Examples--light and microwaves
Transverse in medical terms means across, or right-to-left. In contrast, longitudinal means up-and-down.
No, transverse means crosswise. It would be something across something else. You may make a transverse incision across the abdomen, for example (which could be straight or crooked as long as it is in a cross direction).
is a star in a sky and stay across the central
Microwaves are part of the electromagnetic spectrum and are therefore transverse waves.
Transverse. Radio waves are electromagnetic waves, which are transverse.
No. Radiant heat is an electromagnetic wave, and EM waves are transverse waves.
It travels as a transverse wave. A longitudinal wave would mean the the rope is stretching and compressing. The fact that you see displacement perpendicular to the rope means it is transverse.