different between needed vs transat
needed
English
Etymology
From need +? -ed. The adjective is derived from the verb.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?ni?d?d/
- (General American) IPA(key): /?nid?d/
- Homophone: kneaded
- Hyphenation: need?ed
Adjective
needed (comparative more needed, superlative most needed)
- Necessary; being required.
Derived terms
- much-needed
Verb
needed
- simple past tense and past participle of need
Anagrams
- endeed
needed From the web:
- what needed for real id
- what needed for passport
- what needed to open bank account
- what needed for herd immunity
- what needed to renew passport
- what needed to be a flight attendant
- what needed to buy a house
- what needed to rent a car
transat
English
Etymology
Clipping of transatlantic, from their use on transatlantic liners.
Noun
transat (plural transats)
- A type of large deck chair with a footrest that can slide under the seat when not in use.
Anagrams
- Rattans, rattans, tantras, tartans
French
Noun
transat m (plural transats)
- transat; deck chair
Further reading
- “transat” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
transat From the web:
- what transatlantic means
- what transatlantic flight mean
- transaction means
- what transatlantic flight
- what transatlantic telegraph cable
- transatlanticism meaning
- what does transatlantic mean
- what is transatlantic accent
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