transposing in English

verb
1
cause (two or more things) to change places with each other.
the captions describing the two state flowers were accidentally transposed
2
transfer to a different place or context.
the problems of civilization are transposed into a rustic setting

Use "transposing" in a sentence

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

1. Except Operatic Aria, transposing is allowed or solo pieces.

2. Transposing bass clef instruments for Tuba, Bombardon, and Contrabass

3. Method for transposing hologram into molded material by using micro unevenness hologram

4. – transposing and implementing measures are adopted at different institutional levels (national / federal, regional, local);

5. Anagram definition is - a word or phrase made by transposing the letters of another word or phrase

6. It can also be obtained by transposing Gelid Cryotheum on Cinnabar Ore in the Fluid Transposer.

7. The Commission counters the argument raised by SIAE at the hearing, that the Commission was aware of the obligation to affix the sign owing to notification of Legislative Decree 685/94 as a measure transposing Directive 92/100, by stating that that obligation is not a measure transposing Directive 92/100, because that obligation is not necessary for transposing the directive.

8. However, when transposing schemes from one Member State to another, local circumstances have to be taken into account.

9. National legislation transposing the Directive is presented in the Commission Staff Working Paper[15] accompanying this report.

10. The Bassoon is a non-transposing instrument known for its distinctive tone colour, wide range, variety of character and agility

11. The possible connection of a master keyboard for controlling purposes (transposing, use of controllers) allows additional processing of the sequences and grooves.

12. Anagrams, (used with a singular verb) a game in which the players build words by transposing and, often, adding letters

13. The Cornet is also a transposing instrument like the trumpet, but it is also available in E-flat as a soprano Cornet

14. ‘This can be studied by transposing the innervation of a muscle to its Antagonist, or by transposing one of its tendons to the opposite side of a joint, such that the mechanical action of the muscle is reversed.’ ‘Moving through a complete range of motion will strengthen the agonist and stretch the Antagonist …

15. Starting in the 18th-century treble clef has been used for transposing instruments that sound an octave lower, such as the guitar; it has also been used for the tenor voice.

16. A revision clause stipulates that the Commission may propose a revision of the text five years after the deadline for transposing the Directive, in the light of experience acquired in applying it.

17. Nevertheless, IM Michael Basman has experimented with 1.h3, usually following it up with 2.g4 (transposing to the Grob), or 2.a3 followed by a quick c4, a line that has been dubbed the "Creepy crawly"

18. This not only imposes a heavy burden on businesses within the existing Member States but is creating an almost insupportable situation for the candidate countries since, in many cases, the rate of accretion of new legislation is greater than the rate at which they are capable of transposing the existing acquis.

19. The individual Georgian buildings reflect the profound influence of Palladio, and their collective scale, style, and the organisation of the spaces between buildings epitomises the success of architects such as the John Woods, Robert Adam, Thomas Baldwin, and John Palmer in transposing Palladio’s ideas to the scale of a complete city, situated in a hollow in the hills and built to a Picturesque landscape aestheticism creating a strong garden city feel, more akin to the 19th century garden cities than the 17th century Renaissance cities.

20. are the Rights Commissioner and the Labour Court required by any provision of Community law (and in particular the obligation to interpret domestic law in light of the wording and purpose of a Directive so as to produce the result pursued by the Directive) to interpret provisions of domestic law enacted for the purpose of transposing Council Directive 1999/70/EC of 28 June 1999 concerning the framework agreement on fixed-term work concluded by ETUC, UNICE and CEEP as having retrospective effect to the date on which the said Directive should have been transposed where:

21. 12 Directive 2011/16 was transposed into Luxembourg law by the loi du 29 mars 2013 portant transposition de la directive 2011/16 et portant 1) modification de la loi générale des impôts, 2) abrogation de la loi modifiée du 15 mars 1979 concernant l’assistance administrative internationale en matière d’impôts directs (Law of 29 March 2013 transposing Directive 2011/16 and (1) amending the General Tax Law; and (2) repealing the amended Law of 15 March 1979 on international administrative assistance in the field of direct taxation) (Mémorial A 2013, p. 756; ‘the Law of 29 March 2013’).

22. Under Paragraph 105a (1) and (4) of Law No 155/1995 on old-age insurance transposing the provisions of the Staff Regulations, insured persons who have become officials or other servants of the European Communities or their institutions and have ceased to be employed or self-employed in the Czech Republic are entitled to have their pension rights acquired in the Czech Republic transferred to the pension scheme of the Communities if they have been granted no pension under the Czech insurance scheme, in which case ‘pension rights shall mean the amount determined as the actuarial equivalent depending on the length of the insured period that has elapsed and the bases of assessment’.