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Wiktionary
transoceanic

a. 1 beyond or on the other side of an ocean 2 crossing an ocean

WordNet
transoceanic

adj. on or from the other side of an ocean; "transoceanic crossing"

Usage examples of "transoceanic".

He took off his Ike jacket, pulled his necktie down, took a cold beer from the ice-filled insulated box, and then unpacked the Zenith Transoceanic portable radio.

He got back in the Chevrolet and went to the PX and bought a Zenith Transoceanic portable radio to replace the one that had gotten blown away at No.

The NATO mission would be to maintain the Atlantic Bridge and continue transoceanic trade, and the obvious Soviet mission would be to interdict this trade.

An all-weather interceptor, the F-14 has transoceanic range, Mach 2 speed, and a radar computer fire-control system that can lock onto and attack six separate targets with long-range Phoenix air-to-air missiles.

I make it thirty meters long at least and capable of transoceanic travel.

He saw Otto with his somewhat rough-hewn transoceanic elegance striding through the Brussels gallery, looking at his paintings, his best paintings, and for a moment he was thoroughly glad he had sent them to the show, though only a few were still for sale.

The old shipping routes and the later transoceanic airlines followed tracks beyond its horizon, and the atoll had been left to sun and wind and the crying of gulls.

I began my long sleep, man had just begun his real conquest of the air in a sudden series of transoceanic flights in airplanes driven by internal combustion motors.

When I began my long sleep, man had just begun his real conquest of the air in a sudden series of transoceanic flights in airplanes driven by internal combustion motors.

Yes, there were no less than three points of convergence between the two phrases, indicating a deep connection between the transoceanic languages that was previously unknown.

It is said that if there had been transoceanic contacts between the civilisation of the Old World and those of the Americas, many plants would have been diffused on both sides of the Atlantic, and that maize, for example, would have been grown in Asia and Africa thousands of years ago as well as in America.

They were currently over southern Norway, well out of range of any ground radar sites, but they still used satellite communications and GPS to call in their position to transoceanic air traffic controllers.

Then we were into clearer air, over the Atlantic, beyond the most used airlanes, even out past the holding patterns for transoceanic flights.

Thus, the development of food production in Australia had to await the arrival of non-native crops and animals domesticated in climatically similar parts of the world too remote for their domesticates to reach Australia until brought by transoceanic shipping.