Metamorphose

//ˌmɛtəˈmɔːˌfəʊz//

Synonyms for "metamorphose" (24 found)

Ranked by relevance and common usage.

Related word relations

OpenGloss and ConceptNet supply richer edges like generalizations, collocations, and derivations.

7 relation types

More general

4 entries

Synonyms

2 entries

Related terms

2 entries

derived

3 entries

etymologically related_to

1 entries

manner of

1 entries

related to

7 entries

Translations

14 translations across 7 languages.

Powered by Wiktionary

Bulgarian

3 entries
  • превръщам verb (to transform (something) so that it has a completely different appearance)
  • превръщам се verb (to undergo metamorphosis)
  • преобразувам verb (to transform (something) so that it has a completely different appearance)

Catalan

2 entries
  • metamorfosar verb (to transform (something) so that it has a completely different appearance)
  • metamorfosar-se verb (to undergo metamorphosis)

French

2 entries
  • métamorphiser verb (to undergo metamorphosis)
  • métamorphiser verb (to transform (something) so that it has a completely different appearance)

Ido

2 entries
  • metamorfosar verb (to undergo metamorphosis)
  • transformar verb (to transform (something) so that it has a completely different appearance)

Latin

1 entries
  • transfiguro verb (to undergo metamorphosis)

Portuguese

2 entries
  • metamorfosear verb (to undergo metamorphosis)
  • metamorfosear verb (to transform (something) so that it has a completely different appearance)

Spanish

2 entries
  • metamorfosear verb (to transform (something) so that it has a completely different appearance)
  • metamorfosearse verb (to undergo metamorphosis)

Sample sentences

4 total sentences available.

Tatoeba + Wiktionary

The brightening of the night also worries biologists, who say artificial lighting disrupts bird migration and the development and behavior of several other animals. At a recent [21-22 Feb.] Washington meeting of experts from several fields to discuss the night, evolutionary biologist Bryant Buchanan of Utica College in New York State cited studies showing that fewer frogs and salamanders metamorphose when the night sky is lighter, and pond snails do not grow as large as normal.

Source: tatoeba (12292461)

In fact, perhaps this is the pure and perfect incest: the brother realising that the sister’s virginity must be destroyed in order to have existed at all, taking that virginity in the person of the brother-in-law, the man whom he would be if he could become, metamorphose into, the lover, the husband; by whom he would be despoiled, choose for despoiler, if the could become, metamorphose into the sister, the mistress, the bride.

Source: wiktionary

Environmental problems are not objectively existing physical phenomena amenable to reliable analysis and diagnosis. They are social constructions whose meaning and significance metamorphose and wax and wane according to changeable human interest.

Source: wiktionary

In fresh snow air can pass with little obstruction from the atmosphere through the snowpack to the ground: given life by differences in the temperature gradient, the snowpack breathes. But time changes that. The snow may metamorphose into what is called equitemperature, or ET, snow.

Source: wiktionary

More for "metamorphose"

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.