释义 |
Definition of deform in English: deformverb dɪˈfɔːmdəˈfɔrm [with object]1Distort the shape or form of; make misshapen. 使变形 he was physically deformed by a rare bone disease Example sentencesExamples - It also deforms the shape of the red blood cell enough that it's destroyed by the body, thus the anemia.
- So, anything that serves to deform the shape of the Earth will affect the speed with which it spins.
- His personality was horribly deformed; his crimes were unforgivable.
- Mary's face is deformed, and she is thought to be brain damaged.
- Cells were both immobilized and controllably deformed by aspiration into a micropipette.
- He started drawing as a small boy during long spells in hospital to correct deformed feet.
- You can turn boxy shapes into organic ones by pushing and pulling on any point or by deforming the shape to an existing curve, while still maintaining the original engineering intent.
- I can just about remember him, including the fact that his ear was deformed.
- He was rushed to hospital where an X-ray showed that one of the major blood vessels to his heart was deformed.
- Corns can also develop due to deformed toes such as hammer or claw toes.
- Some of the bears were taken from the wild as cubs and several have missing and deformed limbs as a result of snares or leg hold traps.
- Don't they get blisters and hard skin and eventually deformed feet?
- However, the film is going to change those faces, and so I'm not sure if I want to see these hideously deformed new visages.
- If more force is applied they can be plastically deformed so as to take on a permanently bent shape.
- Americans would indignantly object if anyone said that armadillos and gophers were deformed and grotesque.
- This delusion has deformed British cinema for decades, and largely blinded us to our other identity as Europeans.
- If a material can be deformed under stress but will not return to its original shape or dimension it is not elastic.
- At a deeper level, some desires are themselves deformed by social pressures.
- Such a label, which stays the same no matter how much a given knot may be deformed or twisted, is known as an invariant.
- They have twisted and deformed historical facts to serve their own purposes.
Synonyms make misshapen, distort the shape of, disfigure, bend out of shape, misshape, contort, buckle, twist, warp, damage, impair, maim, injure misshapen, distorted, malformed, contorted, out of shape twisted, crooked, curved, warped, buckled, gnarled crippled, maimed, injured, damaged, humpbacked, hunchbacked, disfigured ugly, unsightly, grotesque, monstrous marred, mutilated, mangled informal fugly - 1.1no object Become distorted or misshapen; undergo deformation.
变形;变畸形 the suspension deforms slightly on corners 吊顶的角落有点变形。 Example sentencesExamples - His face was jagged and scarred, his features aged and ugly, deformed over many years of struggle.
- Due to the resilience of the epoxy over Portland cement, the epoxy will deform slightly under point or line loading.
- Preservation is comparatively poor and nearly all the material is crushed and deformed.
- In many instances, they become rough, deformed and severely reduced in size.
- On the other hand it is less readily plastically deformed.
- Technician A says unless the job is done with an arbor press the tone wheel is likely to become deformed.
- Sticking a couple of partially inflated balloons up the front of it only made him look even worse, deformed rather than voluptuous.
- Here we examine this in detail, first looking at the case of a circular toroid deformed into an ellipse.
- They are flattened and deformed, so some doubts about the identifications exist.
- Brass is able to deform slightly, hence a good bit of tightening causes the ferule to seal nicely against the pipe.
- An example is sickle cell disease, where the red cells become rigid and deformed and break down more readily, leading to anaemia.
- This surprising finding is based on the measurement of a cell's ability to resist when deformed.
- However, when armor was hit on a particular spot, just above the energy core, the pressure would cause the plate to deform slightly.
- The bed's mattress deformed under the large weight, but the blackness covering the figure did not change.
- His sculpted nose grew to a point, sharp at the tip and deformed in many ways.
- Sure, they were discolored and deformed, but I had seen plenty of cases that were much worse.
- Rocks of the Ballynane and younger formations only ever contain one pervasive fabric, unless deformed within a fault zone.
- I couldn't move my left foot because the thick metal of the firewall had deformed around my boot.
- That is, the protein remains in the solid state when deformed against a rigid surface.
- The majority of liposomes in these two images appear regularly spherical and not deformed.
Derivativesadjective The software recognizes deformable surfaces and allows up to seven per cent wheelspin, because sometimes you need to let the tires dig into snow or sand just a little bit to gain traction. Example sentencesExamples - Six airbags, state of the art four-wheel anti-lock brakes, and deformable roof lining all work to protect cabin occupants.
- Each vehicle is fully deformable, with impacts on individual parts of the chassis giving rise to lost doors, dented bodywork and smashed windscreens.
OriginLate Middle English: from Old French desformer, via medieval Latin from Latin deformare, from de- (expressing reversal) + forma 'a shape'. form from Middle English: Form goes back to Latin forma ‘a mould or form’, and is an element in many English words such as conform (Middle English) make like something else; deform (Late Middle English) ‘mis-shape’; and reform (Middle English) ‘put back into shape’. Formal (Late Middle English) originally meant ‘relating to form’, and developed the sense ‘prim, stiff’ in the early 16th century. Format (mid 19th century) came via French and German from Latin formatus (liber) ‘shaped (book)’. Formula (early 17th century) was in Latin a ‘little form’ and was at first a fixed form of words used in ceremonies. Use in chemistry is from the mid 19th century.
Definition of deform in US English: deformverbdəˈfôrmdəˈfɔrm [with object]1Distort the shape or form of; make misshapen. 使变形 he was physically deformed by a rare bone disease Example sentencesExamples - He was rushed to hospital where an X-ray showed that one of the major blood vessels to his heart was deformed.
- If a material can be deformed under stress but will not return to its original shape or dimension it is not elastic.
- Americans would indignantly object if anyone said that armadillos and gophers were deformed and grotesque.
- This delusion has deformed British cinema for decades, and largely blinded us to our other identity as Europeans.
- You can turn boxy shapes into organic ones by pushing and pulling on any point or by deforming the shape to an existing curve, while still maintaining the original engineering intent.
- He started drawing as a small boy during long spells in hospital to correct deformed feet.
- At a deeper level, some desires are themselves deformed by social pressures.
- Such a label, which stays the same no matter how much a given knot may be deformed or twisted, is known as an invariant.
- I can just about remember him, including the fact that his ear was deformed.
- However, the film is going to change those faces, and so I'm not sure if I want to see these hideously deformed new visages.
- His personality was horribly deformed; his crimes were unforgivable.
- Mary's face is deformed, and she is thought to be brain damaged.
- Some of the bears were taken from the wild as cubs and several have missing and deformed limbs as a result of snares or leg hold traps.
- So, anything that serves to deform the shape of the Earth will affect the speed with which it spins.
- If more force is applied they can be plastically deformed so as to take on a permanently bent shape.
- Don't they get blisters and hard skin and eventually deformed feet?
- They have twisted and deformed historical facts to serve their own purposes.
- Cells were both immobilized and controllably deformed by aspiration into a micropipette.
- Corns can also develop due to deformed toes such as hammer or claw toes.
- It also deforms the shape of the red blood cell enough that it's destroyed by the body, thus the anemia.
Synonyms make misshapen, distort the shape of, disfigure, bend out of shape, misshape, contort, buckle, twist, warp, damage, impair, maim, injure misshapen, distorted, malformed, contorted, out of shape - 1.1no object Become distorted or misshapen; undergo deformation.
变形;变畸形 the suspension deforms slightly on corners 吊顶的角落有点变形。 Example sentencesExamples - The bed's mattress deformed under the large weight, but the blackness covering the figure did not change.
- Technician A says unless the job is done with an arbor press the tone wheel is likely to become deformed.
- The majority of liposomes in these two images appear regularly spherical and not deformed.
- An example is sickle cell disease, where the red cells become rigid and deformed and break down more readily, leading to anaemia.
- However, when armor was hit on a particular spot, just above the energy core, the pressure would cause the plate to deform slightly.
- Brass is able to deform slightly, hence a good bit of tightening causes the ferule to seal nicely against the pipe.
- Sticking a couple of partially inflated balloons up the front of it only made him look even worse, deformed rather than voluptuous.
- His sculpted nose grew to a point, sharp at the tip and deformed in many ways.
- They are flattened and deformed, so some doubts about the identifications exist.
- Rocks of the Ballynane and younger formations only ever contain one pervasive fabric, unless deformed within a fault zone.
- I couldn't move my left foot because the thick metal of the firewall had deformed around my boot.
- On the other hand it is less readily plastically deformed.
- Due to the resilience of the epoxy over Portland cement, the epoxy will deform slightly under point or line loading.
- In many instances, they become rough, deformed and severely reduced in size.
- Here we examine this in detail, first looking at the case of a circular toroid deformed into an ellipse.
- This surprising finding is based on the measurement of a cell's ability to resist when deformed.
- His face was jagged and scarred, his features aged and ugly, deformed over many years of struggle.
- Sure, they were discolored and deformed, but I had seen plenty of cases that were much worse.
- That is, the protein remains in the solid state when deformed against a rigid surface.
- Preservation is comparatively poor and nearly all the material is crushed and deformed.
OriginLate Middle English: from Old French desformer, via medieval Latin from Latin deformare, from de- (expressing reversal) + forma ‘a shape’. |