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transit
[tran-zit, -sit]
noun
the act or fact of passing across or through; passage from one place to another.
The area continues to be affected by the transit of illegal drugs bound for major cities.
conveyance or transportation of people or goods from one place to another, especially local public transportation.
Improving city transit is a high priority for the new mayor.
a transition or change.
The transit of autumn to winter saw woodpecker season in full swing and Canada geese on the move.
Astronomy.
the passage of a heavenly body across the meridian of a given location or through the field of a telescope.
The experiments lasted long enough for us to detect the transit of black holes with a mass of up to 10 times that of our sun.
the passage of Mercury or Venus across the disk of the sun, or of a satellite or its shadow across the face of its primary.
In June 2012, a NASA webcast enabled the public to view the transit of Venus across the solar disk.
Astrology., the passage of a planet through one of the twelve houses or divisions of the celestial sphere or across the position held by another planet in a person’s birth chart.
The transit of Mars is happening in the third house for you, so expect a shift in things concerning home and family.
Also called transit theodolite, transit instrument. Surveying., a type of theodolite having a telescope that can be flipped vertically to reverse the direction of view: used for measuring horizontal and often vertical angles, sometimes with the ability to take successive measurements of the same angle and average them for greater accuracy.
U.S. Aerospace., Transit, one of a series of satellites for providing positional data to ships and aircraft.
verb (used with object)
to pass across or through.
Many millions of oil barrels transit the Suez Canal every day.
It’s fairly easy to intercept emails as they transit the internet.
Surveying, Astronomy., to flip (a telescope) vertically in order to reverse the direction of view.
Astronomy., to cross (a meridian, celestial body, etc.).
Mercury transits the sun about 13 or 14 times each century.
verb (used without object)
to pass over, through, into, or out of something.
Are you planning on transiting through the United States?
Attackers can hijack your data as it transits to and from your system.
Astronomy., to make a passage across a meridian, celestial body, etc..
The probe was looking for planets transiting across the face of stars.
transit
/ ˈtrænsɪt, ˈtrænz- /
noun
the passage or conveyance of goods or people
( as modifier )
a transit visa
a change or transition
a route
astronomy
the passage of a celestial body or satellite across the face of a relatively larger body as seen from the earth
the apparent passage of a celestial body across the meridian, caused by the earth's diurnal rotation
astrology the passage of a planet across some special point on the zodiac
while being conveyed; during passage
verb
to make a transit through or over (something)
astronomy to make a transit across (a celestial body or the meridian)
to cause (the telescope of a surveying instrument) to turn over or (of such a telescope) to be turned over in a vertical plane so that it points in the opposite direction
transit
The passage of a smaller celestial body or its shadow across the disk of a larger celestial body. As observed from Earth, Mercury and Venus are the only planets of the solar system that make transits of the Sun, because they are the only planets with orbits that lie between Earth and the Sun. Mercury makes an average of 13 transits of the Sun each century. Transits of Venus across the Sun are much rarer, with only 7 of them having occurred between 1639 and 2004. In contrast, transits of Jupiter's moons across its disk are common occurrences.
Compare occultation
The passage of a celestial body across the celestial meridian (the great circle on the celestial sphere passing through the celestial poles and an observer's zenith). For any observer, the object is at its highest in the sky at its transit of the observer's meridian.
See more at celestial meridian
Other Word Forms
- transitable adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of transit1
Idioms and Phrases
in transit. in transit.
Example Sentences
In May, the chief executive of the local tourist agency told Spectrum News that a gondola was one of the transit options under consideration.
On Friday, the committee stripped the language and moved ahead with the remainder of the bill, which is designed to expedite transit projects in California.
Soldiers rehearsed fending off enemy troops on the mass transit system, expressways and city suburbs.
Azerbaijan walks away with de facto immunity instead of being held accountable for its actions against the Armenians of Artsakh, as well as arms sales and a transit corridor to Turkey.
Why do transit projects like California’s high-speed rail take so long to complete?
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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