transnational
IPA: trænsnˈæʃʌnʌɫ
noun
- Someone operating in several countries.
adjective
- Between or beyond national boundaries.
- Involving several nations or nationalities.
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Examples of "transnational" in Sentences
- Is the SWP really transnational
- It is part of the transnational Oresund Region.
- Ethnography is used in the transnational ballet world.
- He is a fellow of the Transnational Institute, Amsterdam.
- Now it is part of the transnational Bertelsmann corporation.
- The organization became a case of transnational ethnic nationalism.
- The ideal type thus created, they dubbed the transnational enterprise.
- At the time, it constituted the biggest transnational direct election ever.
- He is also the inaugural President of the transnational Arc Manche Assembly.
- The Transnational Republic is a member of the United Transnational Republics.
- Second, they are transnational, that is, not identified with national ideologies nor driven by short-term policy agendas.
- The University of Michigan Law School became the first law school to require a course in transnational law, commencing in 2001.
- (The increase reflects a rise in transnational marriages, and consequently transnational divorces, as well as growing awareness of the Hague Convention.)
- Most of the pirates are former fisherman dislodged from their traditional source of income by much larger pirates, namely transnational fishing conglomerates.
- The interaction between the management of the two companies is studied as a success story in transnational/transcultural corporate interactions, in contrast to the straight takeovers or foreign invasions which are more often the case.
- My name is Alva D. Bennett, currently I am teching interm. and higher level english to business managers in transnational firms in Mexico D.F. The U.S. company I an owner/sr. officer recruits Certificated English teachers, native speakers of English, to teach to Mexico.
- But Mr. King, who was elected in 2010 and is expected to serve a single, four-year term because of his age, has been stymied as he charted a two-pronged course to convince the so-called transnational companies that the union could be an effective business partner by ensuing improved quality and productivity.
- More productive transatlantic studies of American and British writings, then, seek not only to reveal the intellectual, commercial, political, or personal connections between these two nations, but also to illuminate and investigate what Susan Castillo calls the "transatlantic dynamic [...] an irresistible force of attraction and repulsion, absorption and distinction" in transnational discourse (Will Kaufman and Heidi Macpherson xix).
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