transatlantic in the PONS Dictionary

transatlantic Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

a transatlantic voyage
our transatlantic allies/partners (said by British)

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
This ship was lost on only her third transatlantic voyage.
en.wikipedia.org
There was in various transatlantic countries such an abundance of maize, that the farmers had to burn it as fuel in their railway engines.
en.wikipedia.org
Although built for transatlantic service, she was also designed to spend a large proportion of the year cruising.
en.wikipedia.org
There she resumed escort assignments and for the next seven months guarded coastal and transatlantic convoys.
en.wikipedia.org
In 1905, two of the transatlantic cables broke, one the night before the match was to begin.
en.wikipedia.org
There she was equipped with an experimental plastic cover for her bridge to be tested on her first transatlantic crossing.
en.wikipedia.org
Minutes later, transatlantic telephone cables began breaking sequentially, farther and farther downslope, away from the epicenter.
en.wikipedia.org
It addressed the idea of the creation of a transatlantic free trade area.
en.wikipedia.org
During the 16-day transatlantic voyage, over 700 people contracted the contagious norovirus illness.
en.wikipedia.org
The 707 has been used on domestic, transcontinental and transatlantic flights, and for cargo and military applications.
en.wikipedia.org

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