v. [f. TRANS- 2 + MAKE v., rendering Gr. μεταποιεῖν.] trans. To make into something different, to refashion. Hence Transmaking vbl. sb.
1844. Dublin Rev., March, 92. They [the sacramental symbols] are as it were transmade, made into a new thing, or, in the apt language of the Catholic dogma, transubstantiated.
1874. Pusey, Lent. Serm., 315. Those whom man could not have changed even by punishing, but the Word transmade, forming and fashioning them after its own will.
1909. D. Stone, Doctr. Eucharist, I. 72 [transl. St. Gregory of Nyssa]. That body by the indwelling of God the Word was transmade (μετεποιήθη) to the dignity of Godhead.