rare0. [f. TRANS- 1 + L. flux-us flowing, flux: cf. efflux, etc.] A flowing through, across, or beyond.
1778. trans. Swedenborgs Treat. Heaven & Hell, 173. Little children, whose interiour is not only formed by a transflux of innocence from the Lord, but also disposed and adapted to receive the good of cœlestial love. Ibid. 213. What at first seemed an influx from them, was a transflux through them.
1829. Ure, Geol., 351. Of this mighty deluge, the concomitant and effect of the transflux of the ocean which anciently covered a large portion of the present habitable earth, we have universal evidence.
1864. in Webster. Hence in later Dicts.
attrib. 1923. The Pantagraph (IL), 13 Oct., 3/3. The transflux screen is a new patent screen that allows pictures to be projected upon it in broad daylight the pictures being as sharp and clear as though shown in a darkened room.