0 to spoil the usual and true shape of something:
These plastics deform at temperatures of over 90°C.
1 to change the shape or structure, esp. by using great pressure:
Table 4 shows the comparison between undeveloped (deformed and immature) and developed (maturing and infective) eggs.
The truth of ' matter is in state s ', in other words, effectively entails the truth of ' deformed monster m exists here ' (appropriately specified).
Above the gain 8, the volume ignition happens, as seen from the highly deformed dashed parabolas for these higher gains.
The researcher spoke the names of objects present in the room, while pointing at them with his finger, and on occasion deformed their pronunciation.
In algebraic topology, homotopy is a continuous deformation of mappings; in particular, two paths are homotopic if one can be continuously deformed into the other.
Thus, the country's civic laws, institutions, and associations remain severely truncated and deformed.
Fluid-flow pathways in actively deforming sediments: the role of pre fluid pressures and volume change.
The flexed bedding indicates that the sands were partly or wholly liquidized when deformed.