distort 的定义
- to twist awry or out of shape; make crooked or deformed: Arthritis had distorted his fingers.
- to give a false, perverted, or disproportionate meaning to; misrepresent: to distort the facts.
- Electronics. to reproduce or amplify inaccurately by changing the frequencies or unequally changing the delay or amplitude of the components of the output wave.
distort 近义词
deform; falsify
distort 的近义词 48 个
- alter
- belie
- deceive
- disfigure
- mangle
- misconstrue
- misinterpret
- misrepresent
- pervert
- twist
- warp
- angle
- bend
- bias
- buckle
- change
- collapse
- color
- con
- contort
- crush
- curve
- decline
- deteriorate
- deviate
- doctor
- fake
- fudge
- garble
- gnarl
- knot
- lie
- melt
- sag
- scam
- slant
- slump
- snow
- torture
- whitewash
- wind
- wrench
- writhe
- make out like
- misshape
- phony up
- put one on
- trump up
distort 的反义词 14 个
更多distort例句
- The decisions we make about where to live are distorted not just by politics that play down climate risks, but also by expensive subsidies and incentives aimed at defying nature.
- Earlier studies about digital contact tracing have been widely distorted.
- Because these new constellations are being deployed in lower orbits, they’re much brighter, leaving behind long bright streaks on the image and sometimes distorting other parts of the data.
- They take a scientific pose to gain your confidence and then distort the facts to their own purposes.
- That concept of distorting perception was important, Ginzel said.
- And would-be collectors like Henry Stephenson continue to distort the cultural record in their hunt for hidden treasures.
- Saying a word in a different tone can distort or utterly mangle a line.
- Hollywood would never grossly distort the Civil War or D-Day.
- Or, they could distort the contents of the bill and attack anyone who disagreed with them as a legal Luddite and hysteric.
- I have witnessed at first hand how Irving likes to distort things.
- The temptation to distort facts to make a good story is strong; I have seen it in my connection with the 'Courier.'
- Shakspere's contemporaries don't imitate Nature, they distort it, give Passion, and no Reason.
- Wherefore then should grief sadden and distort such blythe, such jocund, features as mine?
- What he wants is not an enlightened and truthful agent, but a man who will distort the truth to suit his prejudices.
- Such a wire must be a little slack, or, as illustrated above, it will distort the framework.