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  1. TRANSPARENT definition: 1. If a substance or object is transparent, you can see through it very clearly: 2. clear and easy…. Learn more.

  2. No matter if you want to make a background transparent (PNG), add a white background to a photo, extract or isolate the subject, or get the cutout of a photo - you can do all this and more with remove.bg.

  3. The meaning of TRANSPARENT is having the property of transmitting light without appreciable scattering so that bodies lying beyond are seen clearly : pellucid. How to use transparent in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Transparent.

  4. TRANSPARENT meaning: 1. If a substance or object is transparent, you can see through it very clearly: 2. clear and easy…. Learn more.

  5. having the property of transmitting rays of light through its substance so that bodies situated beyond or behind can be distinctly seen. Synonyms: crystalline, limpid, pellucid, clear. Antonyms: opaque. admitting the passage of light through interstices.

  6. Definition of transparent adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  7. Synonyms for TRANSPARENT: crystal, liquid, clear, translucent, crystalline, lucid, limpid, pellucid; Antonyms of TRANSPARENT: opaque, colored, cloudy, dark, tinted, glazed, smoky, hazy.

  8. If a situation, system, or activity is transparent, it is easily understood or recognized. We are now striving hard to establish a transparent parliamentary democracy. The company has to make its accounts and operations as transparent as possible. Synonyms: frank, open, direct, straight More Synonyms of transparent.

  9. of relatively small extent from one surface to the opposite or in cross section. adjective. easily understood or seen through (because of a lack of subtlety) “a transparent explanation”. “a transparent lie”. synonyms: obvious.

  10. transparent (trans pâr′ ənt, -par′ -), adj. having the property of transmitting rays of light through its substance so that bodies situated beyond or behind can be distinctly seen. admitting the passage of light through interstices. so sheer as to permit light to pass through; diaphanous.

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