0 past simple and past participle of transfigure --
1 to change the appearance of a person or thing very much, usually in a very positive and often spiritual way: --
The assassination somehow transfigured Kennedy into a modern American saint.
As she gazed down at the baby, her face was transfigured with tenderness.
They are transfigured in scarlet, saffron, emerald.
It begins with a long 23-bar melody on an unaccompanied solo trumpet (which returns at the symphony's close, transfigured by all that has intervened).
Zeitblom describes the work as filled with longing without hope, with hellish laughter transposed and transfigured even into the searing tones of spheres and angels.
The white animal and the transfigured woman (brunette, dressed, walking, talking, feeling) remain in a problematic relation.
This abstraction is usually an attempt to represent the otherness of the transfigured universe.
Suddenly, the woman is transfigured in an array of bright lights.
Our appetities know themselves better when artistically transfigured.
The latter, however, would cause the person to gain the brain of the animal they have transfigured into.