0 past simple and past participle of morph --
1 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.
2 to gradually change one image into another, or combine them, using a computer program: --
However, since then, it has morphed into a major cultural event for the city.
The label started as a record store and morphed into a record label.
Their initial function was to provide valuable information to investors, but over time, they have morphed into supreme and uncontrollable arbiters of the international financial markets.
Has discrimination diminished or simply morphed into new forms?
Patients who were candidates for temporal lobectomy because of intractable epilepsy were asked to identify a morphed (computerized combination) of their own face and that of a famous person.
The second explored facial processing biases using morphed angry-neutral and happy-neutral emotional expressions that varied in intensity.
In contrast, imagine that traffic lights gradually morphed from red to green, and that drivers decided whether their light was green enough to go.
Within the sets of games played after either a selfish or unselfish response, players were still more likely to trust faces morphed to resemble themselves.