0 past simple and past participle of dwarf --
1 If one thing dwarfs another, it makes it seem small by comparison: --
This new crisis may well dwarf most that have gone before.
The new skyscraper will dwarf all those near it.
These dwarfed spikes are called basal spikes.
It is a perennial herb producing one or more erect stems which easily exceed a meter in height but often remain dwarfed in high-elevation, exposed habitat with thin soils.
Stunted subalpine forests are known as krummholz, and occur just below the tree line, where harsh, windy conditions and poor soils create dwarfed and twisted forests of slow-growing trees.
Then the dwarfed man chases him.
In the higher elevations small sections of the hills have an almost alpine-desert look, with sandy open plateaus and extremely dwarfed vegetation.
This type of abnormality is characterized by dwarfed molars with cusps covered with globular enamel growths.
For the garden the dwarfed varieties should be chosen as the tall sorts grow rather slender and crooked.
The dwarfed, misshapen beggar of the streets may have the noblest ideals.