deform

suomi-englanti sanakirja

deform englannista suomeksi

  1. turmeltua, tulla muodottomaksi

  2. tehdä muodottomaksi

  3. turmella

  4. muuttaa muotoa

  5. tehdä epämuotoiseksi, rumentaa

  1. rumentaa, runnella, turmella

  2. deformoida, muovata

  3. tärvellä, turmella

  4. tärvellä

  5. rusentua, vääntyä

deform englanniksi

  1. Having an unusual and unattractive shape; deformed, misshapen; hence, hideous, ugly.

  2. (synonyms)

    (antonyms)

  3. (RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene) I did proclame, / That vvho ſo kild that monſter moſt deforme, / And him in hardy battayle ouercame, / Should haue mine onely daughter to his Dame, and of my kingdome heyre apparaunt bee: (..)

  4. (RQ:Milton Paradise Lost)

  5. (RQ:Cowper Task)

  6. (RQ:Keats Lamia)

  7. (RQ:Robert Browning Fifine)

  8. To change the form of (something), usually thus making it disordered or irregular; to give (something) an abnormal or unusual shape.

  9. (hyponyms)

  10. (RQ:Shakespeare Richard 3 Q1)

  11. (RQ:Shakespeare Comedy of Errors)

  12. (quote-book)|edition=2nd|location=London|publisher=(...) Joseph Moxon,(nb...)|year=1678|year_published=1693|issue=II|section=§ 22 (Of the Piercer)|page=90|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=KdllAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA90|oclc=1205178091|passage=You muſt take care to keep the Bitt ſtraight to the Hole you pierce, leſt you deform the Hole, or break the Bitt.

  13. (RQ:Homer Pope et al Odyssey)

  14. (RQ:Emily Bronte Wuthering Heights)

  15. (RQ:Stevenson Jekyll and Hyde)

  16. (quote-book)|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=Random House|year=2000|section=part 3|page=178|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/amazingadventure0000chab_c4d7/page/178/mode/1up|isbn=978-0-679-45004-7|passage=(..) Joe’s thick thatch of curls had been deformed by his headgear into a kind of glossy black hat, (..)

  17. To alter the shape of (something) by applying a force or stress.

  18. To change the look of (something), usually thus making it imperfect or unattractive; to give (something) an abnormal or unusual appearance.

  19. (ux)

  20. (RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene) / Some of them vvaſhing vvith the liquid devv / From of their dainty limbs the duſty ſvveat, / And ſoyle vvhich did deforme their liuely hevv, (..)

  21. (RQ:Hayward Edward 6)&93; invaded the ''Scottiſh'' borders, waſted ''Tinedale'' & the marches and deformed the country with ruine and ſpoile.

  22. (RQ:Herbert Travaile)'s&93; afflicted vvife (''Aziz Koka|Cavvn Azems'' daughter) goes to viſit him; vvhere finding him ſpeechleſſe, and (by his contus'd face) murdered; never did poore vvretch ſhed more teares, or ſhevv more paſſion; by tearing her faire hayre, deforming her ſvveet face ſo fiercely, ſo amazedly, that her Father and all his family heare her, and ſee it to their griefe and admiration.

  23. (RQ:Rowe Tamerlane)

  24. (quote-book)|location=Edinburgh|publisher=(...) Creech|William Creech,(nb...); and for Strahan (publisher)|William Strahan, and Cadell (publisher)|Thomas Cadell,(nb...)|year=1774|volume=II (Progress of Men in Society)|page=89|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=VFROAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA89|oclc=1154656390|passage=The American private men fought naked; their faces and bodies being deformed with paint, in order to terrify the enemy.

  25. (RQ:Shelley Queen Mab)

  26. (RQ:Hawthorne French and Italian Notebooks)

  27. (quote-book). (..) It was in this picture that Matisse first clearly realised his intention of deforming the drawing of the human body in order to harmonise and intensify the colour values of all the simple colours mixed only with white.

  28. To mar the character or quality of (something).

  29. (RQ:Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost Q1)

  30. (RQ:Evelyn Miscellaneous Writings), I will no longer tire your patience w(sup) these monsters (the subject of every contemptuous pamphlet) then with the madness of the Anabaptists, Quakers, Fift Monarchy-men, and a cento of unheard of heresies besides, which, at present, deform the once renowned Church of England, and approach so little to the pretended Reformation, which we in France have been made to believe, that there is nothing more heavenly wide.

  31. (RQ:Richardson Pamela) to think what a sad thing Passion is, when Way is given to its ungovernable Tumults, and how it deforms and debases the noblest Minds!

  32. (RQ:Griffith Wife in the Right) / VVhile narrow prejudice deform’d the age, / No actreſs play’d, no female trod the ſtage; / (..) / But vvoman once brought forvvard on the ſcene, / By man, like (w), vvas lik’d as ſoon as ſeen.

  33. (RQ:Cooper Oak Openings)

  34. (RQ:Macaulay History of England)

  35. To become changed in shape or misshapen.

  36. (RQ:Pirsig Zen)