Ascendverb
(intransitive) To move upward, to fly, to soar.
Ascendverb
(intransitive) To slope in an upward direction.
Ascendverb
(transitive) To go up.
Ascendverb
(transitive) To succeed.
Ascendverb
(figurative) To rise; to become higher, more noble, etc.
Ascendverb
To move upward; to mount; to go up; to rise; - opposed to descend.
Ascendverb
To rise, in a figurative sense; to proceed from an inferior to a superior degree, from mean to noble objects, from particulars to generals, from modern to ancient times, from one note to another more acute, etc.; as, our inquiries ascend to the remotest antiquity; to ascend to our first progenitor.
Ascendverb
To go or move upward upon or along; to climb; to mount; to go up the top of; as, to ascend a hill, a ladder, a tree, a river, a throne.
Ascendverb
travel up,
Ascendverb
go back in order of genealogical succession;
Ascendverb
become king or queen;
Ascendverb
go along towards (a river's) source;
Ascendverb
slope upwards;
Ascendverb
come up, of celestial bodies;
Transcendverb
(transitive) to pass beyond the limits of something.
Transcendverb
(transitive) to surpass, as in intensity or power; to excel.
Transcendverb
(obsolete) To climb; to mount.
Transcendverb
To rise above; to surmount; as, lights in the heavens transcending the region of the clouds.
Transcendverb
To pass over; to go beyond; to exceed.
Transcendverb
To surpass; to outgo; to excel; to exceed.
Transcendverb
To climb; to mount.
Transcendverb
To be transcendent; to excel.
Transcendverb
go beyond;
Transcendverb
go beyond;
Transcendverb
be or go beyond the range or limits of (a field of activity or conceptual sphere)
Transcendverb
surpass (a person or achievement)