Transliterate in a sentence as a verb

Being able to transliterate at least lets you have a good chance of spotting some things you'll know.

Why bother with Cyrillic if you're just going to transliterate English terms?

I found that the umlauts map pretty well to how a lot of people from GB pronounce their Us, As, and Os. If I had to transliterate the word "use" for example I'd write that as "jüs" in German.

"So in the bottom of the ninth, we decided to transliterate our 90k lines of Python directly to Go, line by line.

I built something just last week using the translate, transliterate, and diacritize APIs.

They transliterate her name in a standard way to Tkhamina on her Russian passport, but on her USA passport it's Thamina.

More seriously; it’s a text from 1788 – I’d think I was allowed to keep its spelling and not translate or transliterate when I’m actually quoting it verbatim.

Now a more radical simplification of just using Hanyu Pinyin directly and not having a computer transliterate is an obvious next step.

But China decided to replace the English-friendly Wade-Giles with the more efficient pinyin, so younger Chinese will transliterate their names differently.

"A question here: Is it always a practical approach to transliterate line by line when transitioning to another language or because "Go [is] semantically very similar to Python"?

Many classic algorithms depend upon re-assignment in one time step and thus do not\nnaturally transliterate well into Glitch; similar limitations occur in single-assignment languages.

Transliterate definitions

verb

rewrite in a different script; "The Sanskrit text had to be transliterated"

See also: transcribe