transcultural

IPA: trænzkˈʌɫtʃɝʌɫ

adjective

  • (sociology, anthropology) Extending through more than one human culture.
  • Not culturally specific.
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Examples of "transcultural" in Sentences

  • Why, then, are the tropes of tyranny seemingly transcultural?
  • The Transcultural and Transnational Poetics of Ameen Rihani and Paul Smail.
  • Two such models are handy: transcultural comparisons and paleoanthropology.
  • The theory of heterogeneity and transculturality of epistemological types. 3.
  • It has laid a compelling claim to be recognized as a unifying transnational and transcultural radical force.
  • Mr. KATZ: Well, she's what I call a transcultural kid and she's a kid -- she watches television and she likes the "X-Files," she watches
  • Cool variations on the Gnarls formula — Danger and a quirkily excellent singer making arty, transcultural pop — run throughout the album.
  • "Crane Story" showcases the playwright's abundant ambition: It features poetry, magical realism and the distinct banter of transcultural, 21st-century adolescents.
  • The transcultural dispositions that immigrant youth cultivate from their life experiences would serve all of us well in the increasingly interconnected, globalized world in which we live.
  • That's because numerous studies show that transracial and transcultural adoptees don't face any higher risks of psychological problems or identity issues than domestic, same-ethnicity adoptees.
  • Paleoanthropology and transcultural comparisons both suggest that humans with more sun exposure nearer the equator live with higher vitamin D levels than their house-bound, temperate climate counter-parts.
  • Peggy L. TrivilinoNashua, New HampshireThe kind of transcultural experience Barack Obama has lived over years and decades may be excellent preparation for the challenges facing him if he's elected president.

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synonyms for transcultural
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