translative

Etymology
From. Compare 🇨🇬.

Adjective

 * Of, or relating to the movement of a person or thing from one place to another.
 * Of, or relating to the translation of language.
 * 1)  Of, or relating to the translative case.
 * 2)  In the form of a trope; figurative.
 * 3) * 1589,, The Arte of English Poesie, edited by , London: Alexander Murray & Son, 1869, Book 3, Chapter 18, p.197,
 * But properly and in his principall vertue Allegoria is when we do speake in sence translatiue and wrested from the owne signification, neuerthelesse applied to another not altogether contrary, but hauing much conueniencie with it as before we said of the metaphore: as for example if we should call the common wealth, a shippe; the Prince a Pilot, the Counsellours mariners, the stormes warres, the calme and [hauen] peace, this is spoken in allegorie
 * But properly and in his principall vertue Allegoria is when we do speake in sence translatiue and wrested from the owne signification, neuerthelesse applied to another not altogether contrary, but hauing much conueniencie with it as before we said of the metaphore: as for example if we should call the common wealth, a shippe; the Prince a Pilot, the Counsellours mariners, the stormes warres, the calme and [hauen] peace, this is spoken in allegorie

Noun

 * 1)  The translative case.
 * 2)  A word in the translative case.