transcend
verb /trænˈsend/
  /trænˈsend/
(formal)Verb Forms
| present simple I / you / we / they transcend |    /trænˈsend/   /trænˈsend/  | 
| he / she / it transcends |    /trænˈsendz/   /trænˈsendz/  | 
| past simple transcended |    /trænˈsendɪd/   /trænˈsendɪd/  | 
| past participle transcended |    /trænˈsendɪd/   /trænˈsendɪd/  | 
| -ing form transcending |    /trænˈsendɪŋ/   /trænˈsendɪŋ/  | 
- transcend something to be or go beyond the usual limits of something synonym exceed
- His works by far transcend anything that has gone before.
 - What we felt for each other transcended all other emotions.
 
Oxford Collocations DictionaryTranscend is used with these nouns as the object:- barrier
 - confines
 - division
 - …
 
Word OriginMiddle English: from Old French transcendre or Latin transcendere, from trans- ‘across’ + scandere ‘climb’.