0 present participle of transcend --
1 to go further, rise above, or be more important or better than something, especially a limit: --
He considers the need for a ' transcending narrative ' in the treatment of clients.
Level 1 (self-preoccupation) and level 4 (transcending self and others) were significantly different for only the youngest of the five age groups.
A supranational governance of interconnection is one of creation, consolidation, and ownership of integrated networks transcending national borders.
Of course, a general case for the bonds of religion transcending the divisions of social class cannot be completely persuasive on such localised evidence.
In all these cases the possessor abstracts away from the specific individuals, transcending them as exemplars of a kind.
Popular exigencies transcending the parties weighed heavily on the government.
The epistemic communities approach is important for the light it sheds on networks of policy professionals transcending individual international organisations.
Transcending memories: remembrance and the design of place.