English edit

Etymology edit

Back-formation from intransigent.

Adjective edit

transigent (comparative more transigent, superlative most transigent)

  1. (uncommon) Willing to compromise.
    • 1941, Arthur Kissam Train, The Story of Everyday Things, Harper & Brothers, page 390:
      But in the second half scientists will undoubtedly make progress in synthesizing the hormones, the mysterious secretions of the ductless glands which regulate the make-up of our personalities, determining whether we are to be big or little, energetic or lazy, virile or effeminate, aggressive or transigent, high-strung or lethargic.
    • 1966 April 22, “Unaccustomed Calm”, in Time[1], archived from the original on 27 August 2013:
      Armed Forces Minister General Enrique Prez y Prez, under whom the army has become more transigent, promised last week that the armed forces "will respect the popular will."
    • 1972, Robert Brent Toplin, The Abolition of Slavery in Brazil, Atheneum, →ISBN, page 85:
      As the editors of the Gazeta da Tarde explained their position, “Intransigent in principles, we are, however, transigent in facts.”
    • 1977, Marco Caliaro, Mario Francesconi, John Baptist Scalabrini: Apostle to Emigrants, →ISBN, page 11:
      The internal contradictions resulting from the lack of distinction between the religious and the socio-political spheres of action had been perceived by the more intelligent and best intentioned, and this accounted for the perplexities of Toniolo and many others, both intransigent and transigent.
    • 1985, R. P. Blackmur, “The Jew in Search of a Son”, in Harold Bloom, editor, The Art of the Critic, New York: Chelsea House Publishers, →ISBN, page 334:
      He is Everyman in exile, the exile in every man. A transigent man, easy, warm, thinking, he makes up in little acts of imagination for frustrations not of his making.
    • 2000 February 18, Alessandra Stanley, “Honoring a Heretic Whom Vatican ‘Regrets’ Burning”, in The New York Times[2], →ISSN:
      “I think Bruno mainly appeals to a small minority, Italians who are at the margins of society,” said Paolo Fabbri, a professor of semiotics at the University of Bologna. “Ours is such a transigent culture, we are known for ‘transformismo,’ going along to get along.”
    • 2007 [1989], “Is Dr King on board?”, in Vinay Samuel, Albrecht Hauser, editors, Proclaiming Christ in Christ's Way, page 201:
      By year's end, he was to admit that Chicago had proved to be more difficult than any place he had been; more transigent, less amenable to reason, more violent.
    • 2013 January 28, Ross Douthat, “Immigration and Republican Self-Interest”, in The New York Times[3]:
      Here is Ezra Klein, explaining why Republican are suddenly looking more, shall we say, transigent on immigration than they’ve been on taxes: []

Synonyms edit

Noun edit

transigent (plural transigents)

  1. (uncommon) A person who is willing to compromise or to be brought to terms.
    • 2009, Giuseppe Maria Finaldi, Italian National Identity in the Scramble for Africa: Italy's African Wars [] , →ISBN, page 214:
      As in other areas, in this field the traditional distinction between transigents and intransigents was clearly at work.

Anagrams edit

French edit

Verb edit

transigent

  1. third-person plural present indicative/subjunctive of transiger

Latin edit

Verb edit

trānsigent

  1. third-person plural future active indicative of trānsigō

Romanian edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from Latin transigens or French transigeant.

Adjective edit

transigent m or n (feminine singular transigentă, masculine plural transigenți, feminine and neuter plural transigente)

  1. transigent

Declension edit