From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishtransnationaltrans‧na‧tion‧al /trænzˈnæʃənəl/ adjective involving more than one country or existing in more than one country transnational corporations
Examples from the Corpus
transnational• The term transnational capitalist class is used interchangeably in the singular and the plural.• These young people are, of course, those from whom tomorrow's transnational capitalist class will be recruited.• Yet there is greater emphasis in the transnational company model on the complete integration and interdependence of operating structures.• Sutherland demonstrated that corporate crime was widespread and virtually endemic in contemporary national and transnational corporations.• Due to transnational industrialization the export capacity of both countries increased.• When we experience the need for a global product we are engaged in a typical cultural-ideological transnational practice.From Longman Business Dictionarytransnationaltrans‧na‧tion‧al /ˌtrænzˈnæʃənəl/ adjective [only before a noun] a transnational company, organization etc does business in many countriesBoth companies are transnational corporations with huge investments outside the US.