v. [f. TRANS- 2 + MAKE v., rendering Gr. μεταποιεῖν.] trans. To make into something different, to refashion. Hence Transmaking vbl. sb.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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