What is another word for Transmarine?

Pronunciation: [tɹansməɹˈiːn] (IPA)

Transmarine is an adjective that refers to anything that is situated or found beyond the sea. Its synonyms include overseas, across the sea, abroad, foreign, distant, extradimensional, far-off, off-shore, transatlantic, and ultramundane. These words all convey the sense of something that is far away from the speaker or the location of the listener. Transmarine can also be used to describe cultures, languages, or customs that are different from the ones found in the speaker's home country. Some other synonyms for transmarine could include international, cross-border, intercontinental, or transoceanic. All of these words have similar meanings, but they each have slightly different shades of meaning that can be used to convey a particular nuance or tone.

What are the hypernyms for Transmarine?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.
  • Other hypernyms:

    Freight Shipping Company, Marine Transport Provider, Maritime Corporation, Ocean Freight Service, Ocean Going Vessels, Seaborne Shipping Service, Shipping/Transport Company.

Usage examples for Transmarine

This early visit to the great Transmarine dominions, and the ties which he formed there, left a marked impression on John Redmond's mind, which was reinforced by other visits in later years, and by all the growing associations that linked him to life and politics in the dominions.
"John Redmond's Last Years"
Stephen Gwynn
Indeed the Government itself, up to within a short time since, favored such a state of affairs; for bad roads belong to the essence of the old Spanish colonial policy, which was always directed to effect the isolation of the separate provinces of their great Transmarine possessions, and to prevent the growth of a sense of national interest, in order to facilitate their government by the distant mother country.
"The Former Philippines thru Foreign Eyes"
Tomás de Comyn Fedor Jagor Rudolf Ludwig Carl Virchow Charles Wilkes
England would have become a Transmarine province of France, it would in time have been absorbed like Brittany.
"A History of England Principally in the Seventeenth Century, Volume I (of 6)"
Leopold von Ranke

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