0 past simple and past participle of morph
1 to gradually change, or change someone or something, from one thing to another:
When someone brings up politics at a party, a casual conversation can quickly morph into an ugly argument.
He grew up watching his elder brother Joe morph from a difficult child to a drug addict.
She claims the media and society make a person try to morph their body into an unnatural size or weight.
2 to gradually change one image into another, or combine them, using a computer program:
Stem cells have the ability to morph into a variety of cells with specific purposes, such as nerve cells in the brain.
The title of the book will likely change as the central idea morphs over time.
With the toy-and-treat bonanza of the holidays approaching, even the most well-behaved kids can morph into monsters.
The advertisements, which morph the racial characteristics of British celebrities, were conceived by the commission for racial equality, whose campaigns have a reputation for using shock tactics.
Many of these no longer exist, or have morphed into other products.
Distilled partials having the same identifier are morphed by interpolating their frequency, amplitude and bandwidth envelopes according to a specified morphing function.
For me, a lecture has become a performance and multimedia show, while a seminar for undergraduates has morphed into various group sections and group projects.
In the media most of those who marched either had only a pleasant walk in mind or morphed into reformers as they went along.