0 present 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: --
More challenging time-scale morphing difficulties include sounds with different number of vibrato cycles, and sounds with and without release segments.
Distilled partials in one source that have no corresponding partial in the other source(s) are faded in and out according to the morphing function.
The discussion will then turn to a more extended passage and elaborate on the idea of 'morphing'.
These were then combined through digital interpolation (or 'morphing') to yield a single, unified timbre.
A further result was a stretched series of soft screams, followed by pitch bends as conversation went on, morphing into a long 'ahhh'.
It was not a simple question of morphing the major sections together, as we consciously sculpted the form of the bridge.
Yes, it's morphing from an ideology of towers in parks to become a kind of nineteenth-century complex of streets and squares and edges.
Morphing among more general additive models is more difficult, because there is no obvious way to find 'corresponding' partials.