transliterated in English

verb
1
write or print (a letter or word) using the closest corresponding letters of a different alphabet or language.
names from one language are often transliterated into another

Use "transliterated" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "transliterated" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "transliterated", or refer to the context using the word "transliterated" in the English Dictionary.

1. Beta is transliterated as b (Beta) in Classical Greek

2. Sometimes transliterated as: Aitareya Brahmana, Aitareya Brahmana, Aitareya Braahmana

3. Akrasia, occasionally transliterated as acrasia, is the state of acting against one's better judgment

4. If other characters are used, the entries shall also be transliterated into the Latin alphabet.

5. The divine name, represented by the four Hebrew letters commonly transliterated YHWH, is circled

6. In Hebrew, Ascribe is יָהַב, which is transliterated as yahab (pronounced yä·hav’)

7. ' sputnik " is an example of a Russian word which has been transliterated into Roman script .'sputnik "

8. Bashert, (Yiddish: באַשערט, also transliterated besherte, beshert or besherter) is a Yiddish word that means "destiny"

9. Different from translated, transliterated Benchers are Benchers that spell out in English letters the Hebrew words for benching

10. In Greek mythology, Aegisthus (Ancient Greek: Template:Polytonic ; also transliterated as Aegisthos) was the son of Thyestes and of his daughter, Pelopia.

11. Akrasia, occasionally transliterated as acrasia (from Greek, "lacking command (over oneself)") is the state of acting against one's better judgment.

12. Achaea - Achaea or Achaia (), sometimes transliterated from Greek as Akhaia (Αχαΐα, Akhaïa [axaˈia]), is one of the regional units of Greece

13. That is to say, God’s name is represented by four Hebrew letters Yohdh, He, Waw, and He, commonly transliterated YHWH.

14. The name of Amun was in ancient Egyptian written as jmn, and it was transliterated in many forms, usually as Ammon, Amoon, Amun or Hammon

15. Achilleus (Greek Ἀχιλλεύς transliterated Akhilleus Roman: Achilles, Etruscan; Achle or Achile) was a hero of the Greeks (Achaeans) in the legends of the Trojan War, i.e

16. → Transliterated Arabic keyboard to type a text with the Latin script → Arabic-Latin conversion → Arabic language: dictionary, grammar, literature → Arabic alphabet & …

17. In ancient copies of the Hebrew Bible, the divine name is represented by four consonants that may be transliterated as YHWH or JHVH.

18. Die engravers represented God’s name, Jehovah, by the four Hebrew letters known as the Tetragrammaton. These are transliterated into English as JHVH or YHWH.

19. The name “deacon” is merely the Anglicized or transliterated form for the Greek name di·aʹko·nos, which ordinarily means a “minister” in the sense of a servant.

20. Ammar Al-Baluchi (Arabic: عمار البلوشي ‎, ʿAmmār Al-Balūshī; also transliterated as Amar Al-Balochi, born Ali Abdul Aziz Ali) is a Pakistani citizen in U.S

21. In Greek mythology, Aegisthus (Ancient Greek: Template:Polytonic, "goat strength" — also transliterated as Aegisthos or Aigísthos) was the son of Thyestes and of his daughter, Pelopia.

22. Akrasia ( / əˈkreɪziə /; Greek ἀκρασία, "lacking command"), occasionally transliterated as acrasia or Anglicised as Acrasy or acracy, is described as a lack of self-control or the state of acting against one's better judgment

23. Akrasia ( / əˈkreɪziə /; Greek ἀκρασία, "lacking command"), occasionally transliterated as acrasia or Anglicised as acrasy or Acracy, is described as a lack of self-control or the state of acting against one's better judgment

24. When Ptolemy’s Greek work was adopted in the Islamic world, its title in Arabic was shortened to The Greatest, which when transliterated into Latin became Almagest. (The Greek Mathematike Syntaxis translated into Latin as Syntaxis mathematica.)

25. Bema: from the base of : Transliterated Word: TDNT Entry: Bema: None: Phonetic Spelling: Parts of Speech: bay'-ma: Noun Neuter : Definition: a step, pace, the space which a foot covers, a foot-breath; a raised place mounted by steps

26. ‘The Avestan yasna is equivalent to yajna, zrazda to shraddha, and kavi is common to both texts.’ ‘The word paradise comes from the Avestan word pairidaêza, ‘a walled garden,’ which Xenophon transliterated into Greek as paradeisos.’

27. Boule may refer to: Boule (ancient Greece), a citizens' council appointed to run daily affairs of a city Hellenic Parliament, transliterated as Vouli or Boule from Greek Boule (bread), a round loaf of white (often sourdough) bread

28. Cytherean is an adjective meaning pertaining to Cythera (Greek Κύθηρα, also transliterated Kythera or Kithira), a small island now part of Greece, southeast of the Peloponnesus.It is also an adjective meaning pertaining to the planet Venus.

29. In Greek mythology, the name Alke / ˈælkiː / ( Ancient Greek: Ἁλκή means "prowess, courage"), also transliterated as Alce, may refer to: Alke, the spirit and personification of the abstract concept of courage and battle-strength

30. The Kingdom of Cambodia (ព្រះរាជាណាចក្រកម្ពុជា ឬ ប្រទេសកម្ពុជា) (sometimes transliterated as Kampuchea to more closely represent the Khmer pronunciation) is a Southeast Asian nation bordered by Vietnam to the east, Laos to the north, Thailand to the northwest, and the Gulf of Thailand to the southwest.

31. Look up Alavi, Alawite, or Alevi in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.: Alavi (Arabic: علوي ‎), also transliterated as Alevi, Alevi, Alavi, Alawid, or Alawite (French: Alaouite), is an adjective denoting "of or related to Ali", the Prophet Muhammad's cousin.As a proper noun it is used by individuals, dynasties, places, and religious sects and organizations who identify as being either

32. In our English Bibles, the Greek word Abyssos [] is transliterated as "Abyss" (RSV "bottomless pit") in every instance except Romans 10:7, where it is translated "the deep."In the Septuagint Abyssos [] translates Tehom almost exclusively, but in rare instances ShuLam ( Isa 44:27), MeshuLam ( Job 41:22), and Racha ( Job 36:16).

33. Catharsis (Latin), from the Greek Κάθαρσις Katharsis meaning "purification" or "cleansing" (also literally from the ancient Greek gerund καθαίρειν transliterated as kathairein "to purify, purge," and adjective katharos "pure or clean" ancient and modern Greek: καθαρός), is a sudden emotional breakdown or climax that constitutes overwhelming feelings of great pity, sorrow, laughter, or any extreme change in …