Need another word that means the same as “distort”? Find 30 synonyms and 30 related words for “distort” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
The synonyms of “Distort” are: contort, deform, wring, twine, twist, falsify, garble, warp, color, colour, tinge, strain, contorted, buckled, disfigured, out of shape, bend, buckle, misshape, disfigure, misrepresented, perverted, misrepresent, pervert, misreport, misstate, prejudice, manipulate, quote out of context, take out of context
Distort as a Verb
Definitions of "Distort" as a verb
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “distort” as a verb can have the following definitions:
- Affect as in thought or feeling.
- Change the form of (an electrical signal or sound wave) during transmission, amplification, or other processing.
- Become twisted out of shape.
- Give a misleading or false account or impression of.
- Make false by mutilation or addition; as of a message or story.
- Alter the shape of (something) by stress.
- Form into a spiral shape.
- Pull or twist out of shape.
- Twist and press out of shape.
Synonyms of "Distort" as a verb (30 Words)
bend | Bend a joint. Sailors were bending sails to the spars. |
buckle | Fasten with a buckle or buckles. The highway buckled during the heat wave. |
buckled | Fasten with a buckle or buckles. |
color | Change color often in an undesired manner. Color a lie. |
colour | Take on a different colour. The foliage will not colour well if the soil is too rich. |
contort | Twist and press out of shape. Her face contorted with anger. |
contorted | Twist and press out of shape. |
deform | Become distorted or misshapen undergo deformation. He was physically deformed by a rare bone disease. |
disfigure | Mar or spoil the appearance of. The vandals disfigured the statue. |
disfigured | Mar or spoil the appearance of. |
falsify | Falsify knowingly. Changes falsify individual expectations. |
garble | Make false by mutilation or addition; as of a message or story. The connection was awful and kept garbling his voice. |
manipulate | Manipulate in a fraudulent manner. Nations may still be able to manipulate their own data. |
misreport | Give a false or inaccurate account of (something. The press exaggerated and misreported the response to the film. |
misrepresent | Represent falsely. This statement misrepresents my intentions. |
misrepresented | Represent falsely. |
misshape | Shape or form badly or wrongly. A new novel about the way childhood trauma shapes and misshapes the life of the adult. |
misstate | State something incorrectly. To say that he was alone misstates the case. |
out of shape | To state openly and publicly one’s homosexuality. |
pervert | Distort or corrupt the original course, meaning, or state of (something. He was charged with conspiring to pervert the course of justice. |
perverted | Corrupt morally or by intemperance or sensuality. |
prejudice | Disadvantage by prejudice. The statement might prejudice the jury. |
quote out of context | Put quote marks around. |
strain | Rub through a strainer or process in an electric blender. On cold days you are more likely to strain a muscle. |
take out of context | Remove something concrete, as by lifting, pushing, or taking off, or remove something abstract. |
tinge | Colour slightly. The sadness tinged his life. |
twine | Wind or cause to wind round something. A spray of jasmine was twined in her hair. |
twist | Do the twist. The wrestler twisted his shoulder. |
warp | In weaving arrange yarn so as to form the warp of a piece of cloth. Cotton string will be warped on the loom in the rug weaving process. |
wring | Break (an animal’s neck) by twisting it forcibly. I ll wring her neck when I lay hands on her. |
Usage Examples of "Distort" as a verb
- A grimace distorted her mouth.
- The pipe will distort as you bend it.
- Many factors can distort the results.
- You're distorting the sound by overdriving the amp.
Associations of "Distort" (30 Words)
blemish | Add a flaw or blemish to make imperfect or defective. Local government is not without blemish. |
contort | Twist and press out of shape. Her face contorted with anger. |
crimp | A small connecting piece for crimping wires or lines together. Crimp hair. |
damaged | Harmed or injured or spoiled. The storm left a wake of badly damaged buildings. |
deface | Spoil the surface or appearance of (something), for example by drawing or writing on it. He defaced library books. |
deform | Become distorted or misshapen undergo deformation. He was physically deformed by a rare bone disease. |
disfigure | Spoil the appearance of. The vandals disfigured the statue. |
exaggerate | Do something to an excessive degree. Claims of turmoil within the firm are greatly exaggerated. |
garble | A garbled account or transmission. Most readers assumed the word was a typographical garble. |
hyperbole | Extravagant exaggeration. He vowed revenge with oaths and hyperboles. |
irreversibly | In a way that cannot be undone or altered. Our landscape will be irreversibly damaged. |
kink | Form a curl curve or kink. A kink in the road. |
magnify | Make (something) appear larger than it is, especially with a lens or microscope. Praise the Lord and magnify Him. |
maim | Wound or injure (a person or animal) so that part of the body is permanently damaged. 100 000 soldiers were killed or maimed. |
mangle | Press with a mangle. Mangle the sheets. |
mar | A mark or flaw that spoils the appearance of something especially on a person s body. Violence marred a number of New Year celebrations. |
misrepresent | Tamper, with the purpose of deception. This statement misrepresents my intentions. |
mutate | (with reference to a cell, DNA molecule, etc.) undergo or cause to undergo change in a gene or genes. The virus is able to mutate into new forms that are immune to the vaccine. |
mutilate | Inflict a violent and disfiguring injury on. The fine carved screen was mutilated in the 18th century. |
overblown | Past the stage of full bloom. An overblown rose. |
overdo | Do, use, or carry to excess; exaggerate. I d simply overdone it in the gym. |
overstate | To enlarge beyond bounds or the truth. I overstated my case to make my point. |
overstatement | The action of stating something too strongly; exaggeration. To describe the show as a success would be an overstatement. |
pervert | A person whose behavior deviates from what is acceptable especially in sexual behavior. Hector is a man who is simply perverted by his time. |
transformed | Given a completely different form or appearance. Shocked to see the transformed landscape. |
twist | A paper packet with twisted ends. I twisted a strand of hair around my finger. |
wrench | Turn something especially a nut or bolt with a wrench. Casey grabbed the gun and wrenched it from my hand. |
wrest | Obtain by seizing forcibly or violently, also metaphorically. You appear convinced of my guilt and wrest every reply I have made. |