0 present participle of metamorphose
1 to change into a completely different form or type:
But no matter the terminology, the novel's many "fibs" often end up metamorphosing into complex accounts of self and circumstance constituted from discrete but related elements of fact and invention.
Terrace houses became much bigger in the nineteenth century and this made them infinitely flexible for metamorphosing into all manner of subdivisions, original additions and adaptations.
The system which we are metamorphosing is largely a mediaeval one.
Eventually they start metamorphosing into the adult form.
However, they are capable of metamorphosing into other creatures.
As a teenager, she discovers her inborn mutant ability to shed her skin, metamorphosing into a different composition beneath.
The planula larvae then drift with the currents for some time before settling onto the seabed and metamorphosing into new polyps.
This allows some clutches to remain stationary to that habitat, or allowing them to swim to a new habitat before metamorphosing.