0 to gradually change, or change someone or something, from one thing to another: --
She claims the media and society make a person try to morph their body into an unnatural size or weight.
He grew up watching his elder brother Joe morph from a difficult child to a drug addict.
When someone brings up politics at a party, a casual conversation can quickly morph into an ugly argument.
1 to gradually change one image into another, or combine them, using a computer program: --
2 to change gradually in appearance or form: --
3 to change into something different, or to make something do this: --
4 to change one picture into another, or combine them, using a computer program: --
morph (sth) into sth The image of a face will be automatically morphed into another face.
Overall patterns in correlations among floral traits were morph specific in the study population.
When the proportion of the colour morphs was similar, one aphid per morph was selected.
Distilled partials having the same identifier are morphed by interpolating their frequency, amplitude and bandwidth envelopes according to a specified morphing function.
In some sense, morphing also maintains some kind of conservation.
Below we discuss the mechanisms and implications for morph-ratio evolution of the spatial genetic structure and patterns of asymmetrical mating which our study has revealed.
In fourth instar larvae the wing buds indicating a winged morph can easily be identified.
Why should prolonged contact turn ' 'but' ' from a system to a content morph?
Of course, sound objects may merge, morph, and change right before our ears.