Transparent is when you can clearly see through an object
The root word of "transparent" is "transparens," which comes from the Latin words "trans" meaning "through" and "parere" meaning "to show."
The base word of transparent is "transparence," which comes from the Latin word "transparere" meaning "to show through."
Transparent is an adjective.
"Transparent" is "διαφανής" ["diafanis"].
The words lamp post are not typically associated with something that is transparent as a person can physical touch it and see it. Transparent things are those like glass, water, and even the air.
thin; transparent;
I can see you through this transparent door!
The window in my kitchen is transparent.
The word "glass" comes from the Old English term "glæs," which is derived from a Germanic word meaning "that which shines" or "lustrous substance." It is believed to have originated from the Latin word "glacies," meaning "ice," due to the transparent and reflective qualities of glass.
The opposite of transparent is opaque, meaning that something is not able to be seen through or understood easily.
The word you're looking for is "transparent." Objects that are transparent allow light to pass through them without scattering the light.
No, the word 'transparent' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun (a transparent container, a transparent lie).The noun forms of the adjective 'transparent are transparentness and transparency.