0 present participle of transcend
1 to go further, rise above, or be more important or better than something, especially a limit:
Transcending the mere extension of the senses, technology simply discloses a 'way of revealing'.
In this she represents one typical strand of radicalism-a romantic notion of transcending the divisions that plague our world.
But this is not enough because the universality of the mathematical as ontology canceled any possibility of transcending it.
We are truly capable of deep compassion, and of transcending self-interest.
This requires training the letter model not only on single words, but on character sequences transcending word boundaries.
The university's internationalist ideology was explicitly oriented towards transcending differences of nationality, religion and race.
Such a wondrous capacity for transcending environmental influences makes the choice environment irrelevant.
Transcending memories: remembrance and the design of place.