English to Binisaya - Cebuano Dictionary and Thesaurus.

Dictionary Binisaya to EnglishEnglish to BinisayaSense
Word:

 

ilis [í.lis.] : alter (v.); change (v.); exchange (v.); replace (v.); supersede (v.)
Synonyms: alili

Derivatives of ilis


Glosses:
alter
v. (change)1. alter, change, modifycause to change; make different; cause a transformation.; "The advent of the automobile may have altered the growth pattern of the city"; "The discussion has changed my thinking about the issue"
~ awaken, wake up, waken, rouse, arouse, wakecause to become awake or conscious.; "He was roused by the drunken men in the street"; "Please wake me at 6 AM."
~ cause to sleepmake fall asleep.; "The soft music caused us to fall asleep"
~ affectact physically on; have an effect upon.; "the medicine affects my heart rate"
~ refreshen, freshen, refreshmake fresh again.
~ fecundate, inseminate, fertilise, fertilizeintroduce semen into (a female).
~ indisposecause to feel unwell.; "She was indisposed"
~ crybring into a particular state by crying.; "The little boy cried himself to sleep"
~ etiolatemake pale or sickly.; "alcohol etiolates your skin"
~ changeundergo a change; become different in essence; losing one's or its original nature.; "She changed completely as she grew older"; "The weather changed last night"
~ shadevary slightly.; "shade the meaning"
~ animalise, animalize, brutalise, brutalizemake brutal, unfeeling, or inhuman.; "Life in the camps had brutalized him"
~ convertchange the nature, purpose, or function of something.; "convert lead into gold"; "convert hotels into jails"; "convert slaves to laborers"
~ opalise, opalizemake opalescent.
~ arterialise, arterializechange venous blood into arterial blood.
~ make, getgive certain properties to something.; "get someone mad"; "She made us look silly"; "He made a fool of himself at the meeting"; "Don't make this into a big deal"; "This invention will make you a millionaire"; "Make yourself clear"
~ counterchange, interchange, transposecause to change places.; "interchange this screw for one of a smaller size"
~ vascularise, vascularizemake vascular.; "the yolk sac is gradually vascularized"
~ decrepitateto roast or calcine so as to cause to crackle or until crackling stops.; "decrepitate salts"
~ suburbanise, suburbanizemake suburban in character.; "highly suburbanized cities"
~ revolutionize, revolutionise, overturnchange radically.; "E-mail revolutionized communication in academe"
~ etiolatebleach and alter the natural development of (a green plant) by excluding sunlight.
~ barbarise, barbarizemake crude or savage in behavior or speech.; "his years in prison have barbarized the young man"
~ alkalinise, alkalinizemake (a substance) alkaline.; "The oxide is alkalized"
~ mythicise, mythicize, mythologise, mythologizemake into a myth.; "The Europeans have mythicized Rte. 66"
~ allegorise, allegorizemake into an allegory.; "The story was allegorized over time"
~ demythologise, demythologizeremove the mythical element from (writings).; "the Bible should be demythologized and examined for its historical value"
~ land, bringbring into a different state.; "this may land you in jail"
~ coarsenmake less subtle or refined.; "coarsen one's ideals"
~ affect, bear upon, bear on, impact, touch on, touchhave an effect upon.; "Will the new rules affect me?"
~ alchemise, alchemizealter (elements) by alchemy.
~ alcoholise, alcoholizemake alcoholic, as by fermenting.; "alcoholize prunes"
~ shape, formgive shape or form to.; "shape the dough"; "form the young child's character"
~ round down, round off, round out, roundexpress as a round number.; "round off the amount"
~ suspendcause to be held in suspension in a fluid.; "suspend the particles"
~ sobercause to become sober.; "A sobering thought"
~ reconstructcause somebody to adapt or reform socially or politically.
~ increasemake bigger or more.; "The boss finally increased her salary"; "The university increased the number of students it admitted"
~ ease off, let up, ease upreduce pressure or intensity.; "he eased off the gas pedal and the car slowed down"
~ assimilatemake similar.; "This country assimilates immigrants very quickly"
~ dissimilatemake dissimilar; cause to become less similar.
~ commute, exchange, convertexchange a penalty for a less severe one.
~ vitalise, vitalizegive life to.; "The eggs are vitalized"
~ clear, unclutterrid of obstructions.; "Clear your desk"
~ activatemake active or more active.; "activate an old file"
~ activatemake (substances) radioactive.
~ aerate, activateaerate (sewage) so as to favor the growth of organisms that decompose organic matter.
~ activatemake more adsorptive.; "activate a metal"
~ deactivate, inactivatemake inactive.; "they deactivated the file"
~ blunt, deadenmake less lively, intense, or vigorous; impair in vigor, force, activity, or sensation.; "Terror blunted her feelings"; "deaden a sound"
~ remodel, redo, reconstructdo over, as of (part of) a house.; "We are remodeling these rooms"
~ edit, redactprepare for publication or presentation by correcting, revising, or adapting.; "Edit a book on lexical semantics"; "she edited the letters of the politician so as to omit the most personal passages"
~ edit out, edit, cutcut and assemble the components of.; "edit film"; "cut recording tape"
~ tame, chasten, subduecorrect by punishment or discipline.
~ chasten, temper, moderaterestrain.
~ ameliorate, improve, meliorate, amend, betterto make better.; "The editor improved the manuscript with his changes"
~ aggravate, exacerbate, worsen, exasperatemake worse.; "This drug aggravates the pain"
~ wetcause to become wet.; "Wet your face"
~ dry, dry outremove the moisture from and make dry.; "dry clothes"; "dry hair"
~ lubricatemake slippery or smooth through the application of a lubricant.; "lubricate the key"
~ beef up, fortify, strengthenmake strong or stronger.; "This exercise will strengthen your upper body"; "strengthen the relations between the two countries"
~ fortify, lace, spikeadd alcohol to (beverages).; "the punch is spiked!"
~ weakenlessen the strength of.; "The fever weakened his body"
~ bluntmake less sharp.; "blunt the knives"
~ oxidise, oxidate, oxidizeadd oxygen to or combine with oxygen.
~ merge, unify, unitejoin or combine.; "We merged our resources"
~ agemake older.; "The death of his child aged him tremendously"
~ ripen, maturecause to ripen or develop fully.; "The sun ripens the fruit"; "Age matures a good wine"
~ antiquate, antiquegive an antique appearance to.; "antique furniture"
~ antiquatemake obsolete or old-fashioned.
~ make grow, developcause to grow and differentiate in ways conforming to its natural development.; "The perfect climate here develops the grain"; "He developed a new kind of apple"
~ softenmake soft or softer.; "This liquid will soften your laundry"
~ damageinflict damage upon.; "The snow damaged the roof"; "She damaged the car when she hit the tree"
~ ossifycause to become hard and bony.; "The disease ossified the tissue"
~ acerbatemake sour or bitter.
~ stabilize, stabilisemake stable and keep from fluctuating or put into an equilibrium.; "The drug stabilized her blood pressure"; "stabilize prices"
~ destabilise, destabilizemake unstable.; "Terrorism destabilized the government"
~ sensibilise, sensibilize, sensify, sensitize, sensitisemake sensitive or aware.; "He was not sensitized to her emotional needs"
~ desensitise, desensitizemake insensitive.; "His military training desensitized him"
~ accustom, habituatemake psychologically or physically used (to something).; "She became habituated to the background music"
~ disarray, disorderbring disorder to.
~ discolorcause to lose or change color.; "The detergent discolored my shirts"
~ color, color in, colorise, colorize, colour in, colourise, colourize, colouradd color to.; "The child colored the drawings"; "Fall colored the trees"; "colorize black and white film"
~ stainproduce or leave stains.; "Red wine stains the table cloth"
~ huetake on color or become colored.; "In highlights it hued to a dull silver-grey"
~ uglifymake ugly.
~ untunecause to be out of tune.; "Don't untune that string!"
~ adjust, correct, setalter or regulate so as to achieve accuracy or conform to a standard.; "Adjust the clock, please"; "correct the alignment of the front wheels"
~ setput into a certain state; cause to be in a certain state.; "set the house afire"
~ disqualify, unfit, indisposemake unfit or unsuitable.; "Your income disqualifies you"
~ domesticise, domesticize, domesticate, tame, reclaimovercome the wildness of; make docile and tractable.; "He tames lions for the circus"; "reclaim falcons"
~ widenmake wider.; "widen the road"
~ dehydrogenateremove hydrogen from.
~ hydrogenatecombine or treat with or expose to hydrogen; add hydrogen to the molecule of (an unsaturated organic compound).
~ oxygenise, oxygenizechange (a compound) by increasing the proportion of the electronegative part; or change (an element or ion) from a lower to a higher positive valence: remove one or more electrons from (an atom, ion, or molecule).
~ darkenmake dark or darker.; "darken a room"
~ brighten, lighten up, lightenmake lighter or brighter.; "The paint will brighten the room"
~ blear, blurmake dim or indistinct.; "The fog blurs my vision"
~ bedim, overcloud, obscuremake obscure or unclear.; "The distinction was obscured"
~ blot out, obliterate, veil, hide, obscuremake undecipherable or imperceptible by obscuring or concealing.; "a hidden message"; "a veiled threat"
~ cooktransform by heating.; "The apothecary cooked the medicinal mixture in a big iron kettle"
~ slenderise, slenderizemake slender or appear to be slender.; "slenderizing skirts"
~ crackcause to become cracked.; "heat and light cracked the back of the leather chair"
~ dismiss, dissolvedeclare void.; "The President dissolved the parliament and called for new elections"
~ terminate, endbring to an end or halt.; "She ended their friendship when she found out that he had once been convicted of a crime"; "The attack on Poland terminated the relatively peaceful period after WW I"
~ defog, demistfree from mist.; "demist the car windows"
~ concentrate, condense, contractcompress or concentrate.; "Congress condensed the three-year plan into a six-month plan"
~ cool, cool down, chillmake cool or cooler.; "Chill the food"
~ heat, heat upmake hot or hotter.; "the sun heats the oceans"; "heat the water on the stove"
~ warmmake warm or warmer.; "The blanket will warm you"
~ boilbring to, or maintain at, the boiling point.; "boil this liquid until it evaporates"
~ freezecause to freeze.; "Freeze the leftover food"
~ blistercause blisters to form on.; "the tight shoes and perspiration blistered her feet"
~ change over, shift, switchmake a shift in or exchange of.; "First Joe led; then we switched"
~ transposechange key.; "Can you transpose this fugue into G major?"
~ convert, change overchange from one system to another or to a new plan or policy.; "We converted from 220 to 110 Volt"
~ transformincrease or decrease (an alternating current or voltage).
~ transformchange (a bacterial cell) into a genetically distinct cell by the introduction of DNA from another cell of the same or closely related species.
~ transformconvert (one form of energy) to another.; "transform energy to light"
~ transmutealter the nature of (elements).
~ transform, transmute, transubstantiatechange or alter in form, appearance, or nature.; "This experience transformed her completely"; "She transformed the clay into a beautiful sculpture"; "transubstantiate one element into another"
~ ashconvert into ashes.
~ translate, transformchange from one form or medium into another.; "Braque translated collage into oil"
~ reform, reclaim, rectify, regeneratebring, lead, or force to abandon a wrong or evil course of life, conduct, and adopt a right one.; "The Church reformed me"; "reform your conduct"
~ convertcause to adopt a new or different faith.; "The missionaries converted the Indian population"
~ islamise, islamizecause to conform to Islamic law.; "Islamize the dietary laws"
~ reverse, invert, turn backturn inside out or upside down.
~ invertmake an inversion (in a musical composition).; "here the theme is inverted"
~ customise, customizemake according to requirements.; "customize a car"
~ personalise, personalize, individualise, individualizemake personal or more personal.; "personalized service"
~ depersonalise, depersonalize, objectifymake impersonal or present as an object.; "Will computers depersonalize human interactions?"; "Pornography objectifies women"
~ sharpenraise the pitch of (musical notes).
~ flatten, droplower the pitch of (musical notes).
~ disintegratecause to undergo fission or lose particles.
~ magnetize, magnetisemake magnetic.; "The strong magnet magnetized the iron shavings"
~ degauss, demagnetise, demagnetizemake nonmagnetic; take away the magnetic properties (of).; "demagnetize the iron shavings"; "they degaussed the ship"
~ simplifymake simpler or easier or reduce in complexity or extent.; "We had to simplify the instructions"; "this move will simplify our lives"
~ rarify, complicate, refine, elaboratemake more complex, intricate, or richer.; "refine a design or pattern"
~ refinemake more precise or increase the discriminatory powers of.; "refine a method of analysis"; "refine the constant in the equation"
~ complicate, perplexmake more complicated.; "There was a new development that complicated the matter"
~ pressurise, pressurize, superchargeincrease the pressure on a gas or liquid.
~ centralise, centralize, concentratemake central.; "The Russian government centralized the distribution of food"
~ decentralise, decentralize, deconcentratemake less central.; "After the revolution, food distribution was decentralized"
~ socialise, socializemake conform to socialist ideas and philosophies.; "Health care should be socialized!"
~ gear up, prepare, ready, set, fix, set upmake ready or suitable or equip in advance for a particular purpose or for some use, event, etc.; "Get the children ready for school!"; "prepare for war"; "I was fixing to leave town after I paid the hotel bill"
~ internationalise, internationalizemake international in character.; "We internationalized the committee"
~ bolshevise, bolshevize, communise, communizemake Communist or bring in accord with Communist principles.; "communize the government"
~ europeanize, europeanisemake (continental) European in customs, character, or ideas.
~ europeanise, europeanizedenationalize and subject (a territory) to the supervision of an agency of a European community of nations.
~ bestialise, bestializemake brutal and depraved; give animal-like qualities to.
~ americanise, americanizemake American in character.; "The year in the US has completely Americanized him"
~ frenchifymake French in appearance or character.; "let's Frenchify the restaurant and charge more money"
~ civilise, civilizeraise from a barbaric to a civilized state.; "The wild child found wandering in the forest was gradually civilized"
~ nationalize, nationaliseput under state control or ownership.; "Mitterand nationalized the banks"
~ denationalise, denationalizeput under private control or ownership.; "The steel industry was denationalized"
~ naturalize, naturalisemake into a citizen.; "The French family was naturalized last year"
~ denaturalise, denaturalizestrip of the rights and duties of citizenship.; "The former Nazi was denaturalized"
~ naturalise, naturalizemake more natural or lifelike.
~ denaturalise, denaturalizemake less natural or unnatural.
~ even, even outbecome even or more even.; "even out the surface"
~ equalise, equalize, equal, equate, matchmake equal, uniform, corresponding, or matching.; "let's equalize the duties among all employees in this office"; "The company matched the discount policy of its competitors"
~ stiffenmake stiff or stiffer.; "Stiffen the cream by adding gelatine"
~ loosen, loosemake loose or looser.; "loosen the tension on a rope"
~ tighten, fastenmake tight or tighter.; "Tighten the wire"
~ transitivise, transitivizemake transitive.; "adding `out' to many verbs transitivizes them"
~ detransitivise, detransitivize, intransitivise, intransitivizeintransitivize.; "removing the object will intransitivize the verbs"
~ thicken, inspissatemake thick or thicker.; "Thicken the sauce"; "inspissate the tar so that it becomes pitch"
~ fullmake (a garment) fuller by pleating or gathering.
~ diversifymake (more) diverse.; "diversify a course of study"
~ decelerate, slow downreduce the speed of.; "He slowed down the car"
~ deadenmake vapid or deprive of spirit.; "deadened wine"
~ accelerate, speed up, speedcause to move faster.; "He accelerated the car"
~ retard, delay, checkslow the growth or development of.; "The brain damage will retard the child's language development"
~ minify, decrease, lessenmake smaller.; "He decreased his staff"
~ liquidise, liquify, liquefy, liquidizemake (a solid substance) liquid, as by heating.; "liquefy the silver"
~ solvatecause a solvation in (a substance).
~ dissolvecause to fade away.; "dissolve a shot or a picture"
~ validatemake valid or confirm the validity of.; "validate a ticket"
~ vitiate, void, invalidatetake away the legal force of or render ineffective.; "invalidate a contract"
~ emptymake void or empty of contents.; "Empty the box"; "The alarm emptied the building"
~ fill, fill up, make fullmake full, also in a metaphorical sense.; "fill a container"; "fill the child with pride"
~ saturatecause (a chemical compound, vapour, solution, magnetic material) to unite with the greatest possible amount of another substance.
~ clot, coagulatecause to change from a liquid to a solid or thickened state.
~ loudencause to become loud.
~ renormalise, renormalize, normalise, normalizemake normal or cause to conform to a norm or standard.; "normalize relations with China"; "normalize the temperature"; "normalize the spelling"
~ morphcause to change shape in a computer animation.; "The computer programmer morphed the image"
~ neutralise, neutralizemake chemically neutral.; "She neutralized the solution"
~ commercialise, commercialize, marketmake commercial.; "Some Amish people have commercialized their way of life"
~ purify, sanctify, purgemake pure or free from sin or guilt.; "he left the monastery purified"
~ mechanise, mechanizemake mechanical.; "mechanize the procedure"
~ automate, automatise, automatizemake automatic or control or operate automatically.; "automatize the production"; "automate the movement of the robot"
~ automatise, automatizeturn into an automaton.
~ mechanise, mechanizemake monotonous; make automatic or routine.; "If your work becomes too mechanized, change jobs!"
~ chord, harmonise, harmonizebring into consonance, harmony, or accord while making music or singing.
~ polarise, polarizecause to vibrate in a definite pattern.; "polarize light waves"
~ glorifybestow glory upon.; "The victory over the enemy glorified the Republic"
~ contaminatemake radioactive by adding radioactive material.; "Don't drink the water--it's contaminated"
~ devaluelower the value or quality of.; "The tear devalues the painting"
~ insulateprotect from heat, cold, or noise by surrounding with insulating material.; "We had his bedroom insulated before winter came"
~ calcifyconvert into lime.; "the salts calcified the rock"
~ urbanize, urbanisemake more industrial or city-like.; "The area was urbanized after many people moved in"
~ urbanise, urbanizeimpart urban habits, ways of life, or responsibilities upon.; "Birds are being urbanized by people in outdoor cafes feeding them"
~ emulsifycause to become an emulsion; make into an emulsion.
~ demulsifycause to demulsify.
~ decarboxylateremove a carboxyl group from (a chemical compound).
~ nazifycause or force to adopt Nazism or a Nazi character.; "Hitler nazified Germany in the 1930's"; "The arts were nazified everywhere in Germany"
~ fecundate, fertilise, fertilizemake fertile or productive.; "The course fertilized her imagination"
~ clarifymake clear by removing impurities or solids, as by heating.; "clarify the butter"; "clarify beer"
~ embrittlemake brittle.
~ markmake or leave a mark on.; "the scouts marked the trail"; "ash marked the believers' foreheads"
~ nickdivide or reset the tail muscles of.; "nick horses"
~ disable, disenable, incapacitatemake unable to perform a certain action.; "disable this command on your computer"
~ enablerender capable or able for some task.; "This skill will enable you to find a job on Wall Street"; "The rope enables you to secure yourself when you climb the mountain"
~ de-emphasise, de-emphasize, destressreduce the emphasis.
~ tenderise, tenderize, tendermake tender or more tender as by marinating, pounding, or applying a tenderizer.; "tenderize meat"
~ chargecause formation of a net electrical charge in or on.; "charge a conductor"
~ bubblecause to form bubbles.; "bubble gas through a liquid"
~ sweetenmake sweeter, more pleasant, or more agreeable.; "sweeten a deal"
~ iodinatecause to combine with iodine.; "iodinate thyroxine"
~ ionateadd ions to.
~ archaise, archaizegive an archaic appearance of character to.; "archaized craftwork"
~ informgive character or essence to.; "The principles that inform modern teaching"
~ officialise, officializemake official.; "We officialized our relationship"
~ occidentalise, occidentalize, westernise, westernizemake western in character.; "The country was Westernized after it opened up"
~ orientalise, orientalizemake oriental in character.; "orientalize your garden"
~ acetylate, acetylise, acetylizeintroduce an acetyl group into (a chemical compound).
~ achromatise, achromatizeremove color from.; "achromatize the lenses"
~ collimate, parallelmake or place parallel to something.; "They paralleled the ditch to the highway"
~ campgive an artificially banal or sexual quality to.
~ classicise, classicizemake classic or classical.
~ conventionalise, conventionalizemake conventional or adapt to conventions.; "conventionalized behavior"
~ decimalise, decimalizechange from fractions to decimals.; "Stock prices will be decimalized in the year 2000"
~ dizzymake dizzy or giddy.; "a dizzying pace"
~ envenom, poisonadd poison to.; "Her husband poisoned her drink in order to kill her"
~ exteriorise, objectify, exteriorize, externalise, externalizemake external or objective, or give reality to.; "language externalizes our thoughts"
~ glamorise, glamourize, glamorize, glamourisemake glamorous and attractive.; "This new wallpaper really glamorizes the living room!"
~ introvertturn inside.; "He introverted his feelings"
~ laicise, laicizereduce to lay status.; "laicize the parochial schools"
~ politicise, politicizegive a political character to.; "politicize the discussion"
~ radicalizemake more radical in social or political outlook.; "Her work in the developing world radicalized her"
~ proofactivate by mixing with water and sometimes sugar or milk.; "proof yeast"
~ romanticise, romanticizemake romantic in style.; "The designer romanticized the little black dress"
~ rusticatelend a rustic character to.; "rusticate the house in the country"
~ sauceadd zest or flavor to, make more interesting.; "sauce the roast"
~ shallow, shoalmake shallow.; "The silt shallowed the canal"
~ tenseincrease the tension on.; "alternately relax and tense your calf muscle"; "tense the rope manually before tensing the spring"
~ steepenmake steeper.; "The landslides have steepened the mountain sides"
~ scramblemake unintelligible.; "scramble the message so that nobody can understand it"
~ unscramblemake intelligible.; "Can you unscramble the message?"
~ unsexremove the qualities typical of one's sex.; "She unsexed herself"
~ vitrifychange into glass or a glass-like substance by applying heat.
~ pallcause to become flat.; "pall the beer"
~ saponifyconvert into soap by hydrolizing an ester into an acid and alcohol as a result of treating it with an alkali.; "saponify oils and fats"
~ expand, extendexpand the influence of.; "The King extended his rule to the Eastern part of the continent"
~ set aside, suspendmake inoperative or stop.; "suspend payments on the loan"
~ muddymake turbid.; "muddy the water"
~ transformsubject to a mathematical transformation.
~ elevate, lift, raiseraise in rank or condition.; "The new law lifted many people from poverty"
~ harshenmake harsh or harsher.; "Winter harshened the look of the city"
~ dingemake dingy.
~ demonise, demonizemake into a demon.; "Power had demonized him"
~ devilise, devilize, diabolise, diabolizeturn into a devil or make devilish.; "Man devilized by war"
~ etherealize, etherialisemake ethereal.
~ immaterialise, immaterialize, unsubstantialise, unsubstantializerender immaterial or incorporeal.
~ animise, animize, animategive lifelike qualities to.; "animated cartoons"
~ clearmake clear, bright, light, or translucent.; "The water had to be cleared through filtering"
~ dynamise, dynamizemake (a drug) effective.; "dynamized medicine"
~ dynamise, dynamizemake more dynamic.; "She was dynamized by her desire to go to grad school"
~ rarefy, sublimate, subtilizemake more subtle or refined.
~ volatilise, volatilizemake volatile; cause to pass off in a vapor.
~ uniformise, uniformizemake uniform.; "the data have been uniformized"
~ symmetrise, symmetrizemake symmetric.; "symmetrized waves"
~ eternalise, eternalize, eternise, eternize, immortalise, immortalizemake famous forever.; "This melody immortalized its composer"
~ denaturemake (alcohol) unfit for drinking without impairing usefulness for other purposes.
~ denaturemodify (as a native protein) especially by heat, acid, alkali, or ultraviolet radiation so that all of the original properties are removed or diminished.
~ denatureadd nonfissionable material to (fissionable material) so as to make unsuitable for use in an atomic bomb.
~ sanitise, sanitizemake less offensive or more acceptable by removing objectionable features.; "sanitize a document before releasing it to the press"; "sanitize history"; "sanitize the language in a book"
~ verbifymake into a verb.; "'mouse' has been verbified by computer users"
~ shiftmove from one setting or context to another.; "shift the emphasis"; "shift one's attention"
~ sputtercause to undergo a process in which atoms are removed.; "The solar wind protons must sputter away the surface atoms of the dust"
~ drawbring or lead someone to a certain action or condition.; "She was drawn to despair"; "The President refused to be drawn into delivering an ultimatum"; "The session was drawn to a close"
~ makechange from one form into another.; "make water into wine"; "make lead into gold"; "make clay into bricks"
~ dopeadd impurities to (a semiconductor) in order to produce or modify its properties.; "The resistors have been doped"
~ prostraterender helpless or defenseless.; "They prostrated the enemy"
~ exciteproduce a magnetic field in.; "excite the neurons"
~ energise, energize, exciteraise to a higher energy level.; "excite the atoms"
~ shakebring to a specified condition by or as if by shaking.; "He was shaken from his dreams"; "shake the salt out of the salt shaker"
~ outmodemake unfashionable, outdated, or obsolete.; "Modern ways of cooking have outmoded the hearth"
~ spice, spice upmake more interesting or flavorful.; "Spice up the evening by inviting a belly dancer"
~ shortenmake short or shorter.; "shorten the skirt"; "shorten the rope by a few inches"
~ thinkbring into a given condition by mental preoccupation.; "She thought herself into a state of panic over the final exam"
~ makecause to be enjoyable or pleasurable.; "make my day"
~ deflateproduce deflation in.; "The new measures deflated the economy"
~ inflatecause prices to rise by increasing the available currency or credit.; "The war inflated the economy"
~ reflateeconomics: raise demand, expand the money supply, or raise prices, after a period of deflation.; "These measures reflated the economy"
~ digitalise, digitalize, digitise, digitizeput into digital form, as for use in a computer.; "he bought a device to digitize the data"
~ gelatinise, gelatinizeconvert into gelatinous form or jelly.; "hot water will gelatinize starch"
~ recombinecause genetic recombination.; "should scientists recombine DNA?"
~ effeminise, effeminize, feminise, feminize, womanizeto give a (more) feminine, effeminate, or womanly quality or appearance to.; "This hairdo feminizes the man"
~ masculinise, virilise, virilize, masculinizeproduce virilism in or cause to assume masculine characteristics, as through a hormonal imbalance or hormone therapy.; "the drugs masculinized the teenage girl"
~ masculinizegive a masculine appearance or character to.; "Fashion designers have masculinized women's looks in the 1990s"
~ disharmonize, dissonatecause to sound harsh and unpleasant.
~ sexualise, sexualizemake sexual, endow with sex, attribute sex to.; "The god was sexualized and married to another god"; "Some languages sexualize all nouns and do not have a neuter gender"
~ schematise, schematizegive conventional form to.; "some art forms schematise designs into geometrical patterns"
~ patentmake open to sight or notice.; "His behavior has patented an embarrassing fact about him"
~ constitutionalise, constitutionalizeincorporate into a constitution, make constitutional.; "A woman's right to an abortion was constitutionalized in the 1970's"
~ rationalise, rationalizeremove irrational quantities from.; "This function can be rationalized"
~ plasticise, plasticizemake plastic, as by the addition of a plasticizer.; "plasticized PVC"
~ rarefylessen the density or solidity of.; "The bones are rarefied"
~ paganise, paganizemake pagan in character.; "The Church paganized Christianity"
~ incandescecause to become incandescent or glow.; "the lamp was incandesced"
~ deaminate, deaminizeremove the amino radical (usually by hydrolysis) from an amino compound; to perform deamination.
~ angulatemake or become angular.
~ circularizemake circular.
~ sensitise, sensitizemake (a material) sensitive to light, often of a particular colour, by coating it with a photographic emulsion.; "sensitize the photographic film"
~ sensitise, sensitizemake sensitive to a drug or allergen.; "Long-term exposure to this medicine may sensitize you to the allergen"
~ depolarise, depolarizeeliminate the polarization of.
~ intensifymake the chemically affected part of (a negative) denser or more opaque in order produce a stronger contrast between light and dark.
~ isomerise, isomerizecause to change into an isomer.
~ legitimatemake (an illegitimate child) legitimate; declare the legitimacy of (someone).; "They legitimized their natural child"
~ vaporise, evaporatecause to change into a vapor.; "The chemist evaporated the water"
~ industrialise, industrializeorganize (the production of something) into an industry.; "The Chinese industrialized textile production"
~ opacifymake opaque.; "The glass was opacified more greater privacy"
~ opsonizemake (cells) more susceptible to the action of phagocytes.
~ militarise, militarizeadopt for military use.; "militarize the Civil Service"
~ nationalise, nationalizemake national in character or scope.; "His heroic deeds were nationalized by the press"
~ recommendmake attractive or acceptable.; "Honesty recommends any person"
~ sentimentalise, sentimentalizemake (someone or something) sentimental or imbue with sentimental qualities.; "Too much poetry sentimentalizes the mind"; "These experiences have sentimentalized her"
~ solemnise, solemnizemake solemn and grave.; "This ceremony solemnized our hearts"
~ territorialise, territorializeplace on a territorial basis.; "The railways were territorialized"
~ transaminatechange (an amino group) by transferring it from one compound to another.
~ transfigure, spiritualize, glorifyelevate or idealize, in allusion to Christ's transfiguration.
~ unsanctifyremove the sanctification from or make unsanctified.
~ vesiculatecause to become vesicular or full of air cells.; "vesiculate an organ"
~ visualise, visualizemake visible.; "With this machine, ultrasound can be visualized"
~ variegatechange the appearance of, especially by marking with different colors.
~ ventilatefurnish with an opening to allow air to circulate or gas to escape.; "The architect did not think about ventilating the storage space"
~ vivifymake more striking or animated.; "his remarks always vivify an otherwise dull story"
~ vulgarise, vulgarizedebase and make vulgar.; "The Press has vulgarized Love and Marriage"
~ supplemake pliant and flexible.; "These boots are not yet suppled by frequent use"
~ professionalise, professionalizemake professional or give a professional character to.; "Philosophy has not always been professionalized and used to be a subject pursued only by amateurs"
~ smutmake obscene.; "This line in the play smuts the entire act"
~ stillmake motionless.
~ weaponizemake into or use as a weapon or a potential weapon.; "Will modern physicists weaponize String Theory?"
~ eroticize, sex upgive erotic character to or make more interesting.; "eroticize the ads"
~ piggybackbring into alignment with.; "an amendment to piggyback the current law"
~ portmodify (software) for use on a different machine or platform.
~ lifehackmake one's day-to-day activities more efficient.
~ cloudmake less clear.; "the stroke clouded memories of her youth"
~ obnubilate, obscure, blur, confusemake unclear, indistinct, or blurred.; "Her remarks confused the debate"; "Their words obnubilate their intentions"
~ tame, tone down, moderatemake less strong or intense; soften.; "Tone down that aggressive letter"; "The author finally tamed some of his potentially offensive statements"
~ obfuscatemake obscure or unclear.
~ synchronise, synchronizemake (motion picture sound) exactly simultaneous with the action.; "synchronize this film"
~ mince, moderate, softenmake less severe or harsh.; "He moderated his tone when the students burst out in tears"
~ militarise, militarizelend a military character to (a country), as by building up a military force.; "militarize Germany again after the war"
~ break down, crushmake ineffective.; "Martin Luther King tried to break down racial discrimination"
~ fat, fatten, fatten out, fatten up, flesh out, plump out, plump, fill outmake fat or plump.; "We will plump out that poor starving child"
~ disturb, touchtamper with.; "Don't touch my CDs!"
~ dullmake dull in appearance.; "Age had dulled the surface"
~ blunt, dullmake dull or blunt.; "Too much cutting dulls the knife's edge"
~ sharpenmake sharp or sharper.; "sharpen the knives"
~ coarsenmake or become coarse or coarser.; "coarsen the surface"; "Their minds coarsened"
~ loosenmake less dense.; "loosen the soil"
~ untie, undo, loosencause to become loose.; "undo the shoelace"; "untie the knot"; "loosen the necktie"
~ barbprovide with barbs.; "barbed wire"
~ stringprovide with strings.; "string my guitar"
~ straighten, straighten outmake straight.
~ bringcause to come into a particular state or condition.; "Long hard years of on the job training had brought them to their competence"; "bring water to the boiling point"
~ amalgamate, commix, mingle, unify, mixto bring or combine together or with something else.; "resourcefully he mingled music and dance"
~ chargefill or load to capacity.; "charge the wagon with hay"
~ putcause to be in a certain state; cause to be in a certain relation.; "That song put me in awful good humor"; "put your ideas in writing"
~ clean, make cleanmake clean by removing dirt, filth, or unwanted substances from.; "Clean the stove!"; "The dentist cleaned my teeth"
~ begrime, bemire, colly, dirty, grime, soilmake soiled, filthy, or dirty.; "don't soil your clothes when you play outside!"
~ depress, lowercause to drop or sink.; "The lack of rain had depressed the water level in the reservoir"
~ deformmake formless.; "the heat deformed the plastic sculpture"
~ break up, breakdestroy the completeness of a set of related items.; "The book dealer would not break the set"
~ altermake an alteration to.; "This dress needs to be altered"
~ adorn, decorate, grace, ornament, beautify, embellishmake more attractive by adding ornament, colour, etc..; "Decorate the room for the party"; "beautify yourself for the special day"
~ humanise, humanizemake more humane.; "The mayor tried to humanize life in the big city"
~ humblecause to be unpretentious.; "This experience will humble him"
~ alienate, disaffect, alien, estrangearouse hostility or indifference in where there had formerly been love, affection, or friendliness.; "She alienated her friends when she became fanatically religious"
~ rightput in or restore to an upright position.; "They righted the sailboat that had capsized"
~ desensitise, desensitizecause not to be sensitive.; "The war desensitized many soldiers"; "The photographic plate was desensitized"
~ deodorise, deodorize, deodouriseeliminate the odor from.; "This stick will deodorize your armpits"
~ developmake visible by means of chemical solutions.; "Please develop this roll of film for me"
~ blurto make less distinct or clear.; "The haze blurs the hills"
~ blindmake blind by putting the eyes out.; "The criminals were punished and blinded"
~ change intensityincrease or decrease in intensity.
~ change tastealter the flavor of.
~ interchange, substitute, replace, exchangeput in the place of another; switch seemingly equivalent items.; "the con artist replaced the original with a fake Rembrandt"; "substitute regular milk with fat-free milk"; "synonyms can be interchanged without a changing the context's meaning"
~ capturebring about the capture of an elementary particle or celestial body and causing it enter a new orbit.; "This nucleus has captured the slow-moving neutrons"; "The star captured a comet"
~ contribute, lend, impart, add, bestow, bringbestow a quality on.; "Her presence lends a certain cachet to the company"; "The music added a lot to the play"; "She brings a special atmosphere to our meetings"; "This adds a light note to the program"
~ reestablish, reinstate, restorebring back into original existence, use, function, or position.; "restore law and order"; "reestablish peace in the region"; "restore the emperor to the throne"
~ liberalize, liberalisemake liberal or more liberal, of laws and rules.
~ redress, right, correct, compensatemake reparations or amends for.; "right a wrongs done to the victims of the Holocaust"
~ democratise, democratizeintroduce democratic reforms; of nations.
~ neutralizemake politically neutral and thus inoffensive.; "The treaty neutralized the small republic"
~ corrupt, debase, debauch, demoralise, demoralize, deprave, misdirect, pervert, profane, vitiate, subvertcorrupt morally or by intemperance or sensuality.; "debauch the young people with wine and women"; "Socrates was accused of corrupting young men"; "Do school counselors subvert young children?"; "corrupt the morals"
~ loosen, relaxmake less severe or strict.; "The government relaxed the curfew after most of the rebels were caught"
~ unify, unitebring together for a common purpose or action or ideology or in a shared situation.; "the Democratic Patry platform united several splinter groups"
~ flocculatecause to become a fluffy or lumpy aggregate.; "The chemist flocculated the suspended material"
~ turncause to change or turn into something different;assume new characteristics.; "The princess turned the frog into a prince by kissing him"; "The alchemists tried to turn lead into gold"
~ coherecause to form a united, orderly, and aesthetically consistent whole.; "Religion can cohere social groups"
v. (change)2. alter, change, varybecome different in some particular way, without permanently losing one's or its former characteristics or essence.; "her mood changes in accordance with the weather"; "The supermarket's selection of vegetables varies according to the season"
~ alternate, jumpgo back and forth; swing back and forth between two states or conditions.
~ crackleto become, or to cause to become, covered with a network of small cracks.; "The blazing sun crackled the desert sand"
~ modulatevary the frequency, amplitude, phase, or other characteristic of (electromagnetic waves).
~ avianise, avianizeto modify microorganisms by repeated culture in the developing chick embryo.
~ movego or proceed from one point to another.; "the debate moved from family values to the economy"
~ adapt, accommodatemake fit for, or change to suit a new purpose.; "Adapt our native cuisine to the available food resources of the new country"
~ widen, let outmake (clothes) larger.; "Let out that dress--I gained a lot of weight"
~ take inmake (clothes) smaller.; "Please take in this skirt--I've lost weight"
~ branch out, broaden, diversifyvary in order to spread risk or to expand.; "The company diversified"
~ diversify, radiatespread into new habitats and produce variety or variegate.; "The plants on this island diversified"
~ specialize, narrow down, narrow, specialisebecome more focus on an area of activity or field of study.; "She specializes in Near Eastern history"
~ honeycombmake full of cavities, like a honeycomb.
~ breakvary or interrupt a uniformity or continuity.; "The flat plain was broken by tall mesas"
v. (creation)3. altermake an alteration to.; "This dress needs to be altered"
~ alter, change, modifycause to change; make different; cause a transformation.; "The advent of the automobile may have altered the growth pattern of the city"; "The discussion has changed my thinking about the issue"
~ tailor-make, sew, tailorcreate (clothes) with cloth.; "Can the seamstress sew me a suit by next week?"
v. (change)4. alter, falsify, interpolateinsert words into texts, often falsifying it thereby.
~ edit, redactprepare for publication or presentation by correcting, revising, or adapting.; "Edit a book on lexical semantics"; "she edited the letters of the politician so as to omit the most personal passages"
v. (body)5. alter, castrate, neuter, spayremove the ovaries of.; "Is your cat spayed?"
~ defeminise, defeminizeremove the ovaries of (female mammals such as cats).
~ desex, desexualise, desexualize, sterilise, sterilize, unsex, fixmake infertile.; "in some countries, people with genetically transmissible disabilites are sterilized"
change
n. (event)1. alteration, change, modificationan event that occurs when something passes from one state or phase to another.; "the change was intended to increase sales"; "this storm is certainly a change for the worse"; "the neighborhood had undergone few modifications since his last visit years ago"
~ accelerationan increase in rate of change.; "modern science caused an acceleration of cultural change"
~ deceleration, retardation, slowinga decrease in rate of change.; "the deceleration of the arms race"
~ happening, natural event, occurrence, occurrentan event that happens.
~ avulsionan abrupt change in the course of a stream that forms the boundary between two parcels of land resulting in the loss of part of the land of one landowner and a consequent increase in the land of another.
~ breakan abrupt change in the tone or register of the voice (as at puberty or due to emotion).; "then there was a break in her voice"
~ mutationa change or alteration in form or qualities.
~ sublimation(psychology) modifying the natural expression of an impulse or instinct (especially a sexual one) to one that is socially acceptable.
~ surprisea sudden unexpected event.
~ nascence, nascency, nativity, birththe event of being born.; "they celebrated the birth of their first child"
~ breakup, separation, detachmentcoming apart.
~ vagaryan unexpected and inexplicable change in something (in a situation or a person's behavior, etc.).; "the vagaries of the weather"; "his wealth fluctuates with the vagaries of the stock market"; "he has dealt with human vagaries for many years"
~ variation, fluctuationan instance of change; the rate or magnitude of change.
~ conversiona change of religion.; "his conversion to the Catholic faith"
~ death, decease, expirythe event of dying or departure from life.; "her death came as a terrible shock"; "upon your decease the capital will pass to your grandchildren"
~ decrease, lessening, drop-offa change downward.; "there was a decrease in his temperature as the fever subsided"; "there was a sharp drop-off in sales"
~ destabilizationan event that causes a loss of equilibrium (as of a ship or aircraft).
~ increasea change resulting in an increase.; "the increase is scheduled for next month"
~ easing, moderation, reliefa change for the better.
~ deformationalteration in the shape or dimensions of an object as a result of the application of stress to it.
~ transitiona change from one place or state or subject or stage to another.
~ transformation, shift, transmutationa qualitative change.
~ sparkling, twinkle, scintillationa rapid change in brightness; a brief spark or flash.
~ shimmer, playa weak and tremulous light.; "the shimmer of colors on iridescent feathers"; "the play of light on the water"
~ transmutation(physics) the change of one chemical element into another (as by nuclear decay or radioactive bombardment).; "the transmutation of base metals into gold proved to be impossible"
~ damage, impairment, harmthe occurrence of a change for the worse.
~ developmenta recent event that has some relevance for the present situation.; "recent developments in Iraq"; "what a revolting development!"
~ revolutiona drastic and far-reaching change in ways of thinking and behaving.; "the industrial revolution was also a cultural revolution"
~ chromosomal mutation, genetic mutation, mutation(genetics) any event that changes genetic structure; any alteration in the inherited nucleic acid sequence of the genotype of an organism.
~ sex changea change in a person's physical sexual characteristics (as by surgery and hormone treatments).
~ loss of consciousnessthe occurrence of a loss of the ability to perceive and respond.
n. (linkdef)2. changea relational difference between states; especially between states before and after some event.; "he attributed the change to their marriage"
~ relationan abstraction belonging to or characteristic of two entities or parts together.
~ differencea significant change.; "the difference in her is amazing"; "his support made a real difference"
~ gradienta graded change in the magnitude of some physical quantity or dimension.
n. (act)3. changethe action of changing something.; "the change of government had no impact on the economy"; "his change on abortion cost him the election"
~ actionsomething done (usually as opposed to something said).; "there were stories of murders and other unnatural actions"
~ entailthe act of entailing property; the creation of a fee tail from a fee simple.
~ policy change, volte-face, about-face, reversala major change in attitude or principle or point of view.; "an about-face on foreign policy"
~ adulterationthe act of adulterating (especially the illicit substitution of one substance for another).
~ move, relocationthe act of changing your residence or place of business.; "they say that three moves equal one fire"
~ downshifta change to a lower gear in a car or bicycle.
~ downshifta change from a financially rewarding but stressful career to a less well paid but more fulfilling one.
~ filtrationthe act of changing a fluid by passing it through a filter.
~ reduction, simplificationthe act of reducing complexity.
~ decimalisation, decimalizationthe act of changing to a decimal system.; "the decimalization of British currency"
~ metrication, metrificationthe act of changing from imperial units of measurement to metric units: meters, grams, seconds.
~ variationthe act of changing or altering something slightly but noticeably from the norm or standard.; "who is responsible for these variations in taxation?"
~ turningact of changing in practice or custom.; "the law took many turnings over the years"
~ diversification, variegationthe act of introducing variety (especially in investments or in the variety of goods and services offered).; "my broker recommended a greater diversification of my investments"; "he limited his losses by diversification of his product line"
~ fluxin constant change.; "his opinions are in flux"; "the newness and flux of the computer industry"
~ switching, shift, switchthe act of changing one thing or position for another.; "his switch on abortion cost him the election"
~ substitution, commutation, exchangethe act of putting one thing or person in the place of another:.; "he sent Smith in for Jones but the substitution came too late to help"
~ promotionact of raising in rank or position.
~ demotionact of lowering in rank or position.
~ change of statethe act of changing something into something different in essential characteristics.
~ modification, adjustment, alterationthe act of making something different (as e.g. the size of a garment).
~ movement, move, motionthe act of changing location from one place to another.; "police controlled the motion of the crowd"; "the movement of people from the farms to the cities"; "his move put him directly in my path"
~ movementthe act of changing the location of something.; "the movement of cargo onto the vessel"
~ movement, motility, motion, movea change of position that does not entail a change of location.; "the reflex motion of his eyebrows revealed his surprise"; "movement is a sign of life"; "an impatient move of his hand"; "gastrointestinal motility"
~ change of direction, reorientationthe act of changing the direction in which something is oriented.
~ change of magnitudethe act of changing the amount or size of something.
~ change of integritythe act of changing the unity or wholeness of something.
~ conversionthe act of changing from one use or function or purpose to another.
~ updatingthe act of changing something to bring it up to date (usually by adding something).; "criminal records need regular updating"
~ change of shapean action that changes the shape of something.
~ satisfactionact of fulfilling a desire or need or appetite.; "the satisfaction of their demand for better services"
~ nationalisation, nationalizationthe action of rendering national in character.
~ communisation, communizationa change from private property to public property owned by the community.
~ secularisation, secularizationthe activity of changing something (art or education or society or morality etc.) so it is no longer under the control or influence of religion.
~ rolloverthe act of changing the institution that invests your pension plan without incurring a tax penalty.
n. (phenomenon)4. changethe result of alteration or modification.; "there were marked changes in the lining of the lungs"; "there had been no change in the mountains"
~ consequence, effect, result, upshot, outcome, event, issuea phenomenon that follows and is caused by some previous phenomenon.; "the magnetic effect was greater when the rod was lengthwise"; "his decision had depressing consequences for business"; "he acted very wise after the event"
~ depolarisation, depolarizationa loss of polarity or polarization.
n. (possession)5. changethe balance of money received when the amount you tender is greater than the amount due.; "I paid with a twenty and pocketed the change"
~ cash, hard cash, hard currencymoney in the form of bills or coins.; "there is a desperate shortage of hard cash"
n. (artifact)6. changea thing that is different.; "he inspected several changes before selecting one"
~ thingan entity that is not named specifically.; "I couldn't tell what the thing was"
n. (artifact)7. changea different or fresh set of clothes.; "she brought a change in her overnight bag"
~ article of clothing, clothing, habiliment, wearable, vesture, weara covering designed to be worn on a person's body.
n. (possession)8. changecoins of small denomination regarded collectively.; "he had a pocketful of change"
~ coina flat metal piece (usually a disc) used as money.
n. (possession)9. changemoney received in return for its equivalent in a larger denomination or a different currency.; "he got change for a twenty and used it to pay the taxi driver"
~ cash, hard cash, hard currencymoney in the form of bills or coins.; "there is a desperate shortage of hard cash"
n. (attribute)10. change, varietya difference that is usually pleasant.; "he goes to France for variety"; "it is a refreshing change to meet a woman mechanic"
~ differencethe quality of being unlike or dissimilar.; "there are many differences between jazz and rock"
v. (change)11. changeundergo a change; become different in essence; losing one's or its original nature.; "She changed completely as she grew older"; "The weather changed last night"
~ refreshen, freshen, freshen up, refreshbecome or make oneself fresh again.; "She freshened up after the tennis game"
~ dress, get dressedput on clothes.; "we had to dress quickly"; "dress the patient"; "Can the child dress by herself?"
~ acquire, develop, produce, grow, getcome to have or undergo a change of (physical features and attributes).; "He grew a beard"; "The patient developed abdominal pains"; "I got funny spots all over my body"; "Well-developed breasts"
~ regenerateundergo regeneration.
~ shadepass from one quality such as color to another by a slight degree.; "the butterfly wings shade to yellow"
~ gelbecome a gel.; "The solid, when heated, gelled"
~ animalise, animalize, brutalise, brutalizebecome brutal or insensitive and unfeeling.
~ convertchange in nature, purpose, or function; undergo a chemical change.; "The substance converts to an acid"
~ creolizedevelop into a creole.; "pidgins often creolize"
~ mutateundergo mutation.; "cells mutate"
~ experience, haveundergo.; "The stocks had a fast run-up"
~ decrepitateundergo decrepitation and crackle.; "The salt decrepitated"
~ suburbanise, suburbanizetake on suburban character.; "the city suburbanized"
~ roll up, rollshow certain properties when being rolled.; "The carpet rolls unevenly"; "dried-out tobacco rolls badly"
~ glass over, glaze, glaze over, glassbecome glassy or take on a glass-like appearance.; "Her eyes glaze over when she is bored"
~ grow, turnpass into a condition gradually, take on a specific property or attribute; become.; "The weather turned nasty"; "She grew angry"
~ barbarise, barbarizebecome crude or savage or barbaric in behavior or language.
~ alkalinise, alkalinizebecome alkaline.
~ change by reversal, reverse, turnchange to the contrary.; "The trend was reversed"; "the tides turned against him"; "public opinion turned when it was revealed that the president had an affair with a White House intern"
~ change integritychange in physical make-up.
~ change form, change shape, deformassume a different shape or form.
~ formassume a form or shape.; "the water formed little beads"
~ change state, turnundergo a transformation or a change of position or action.; "We turned from Socialism to Capitalism"; "The people turned against the President when he stole the election"
~ adapt, conform, adjustadapt or conform oneself to new or different conditions.; "We must adjust to the bad economic situation"
~ climb up, jump, riserise in rank or status.; "Her new novel jumped high on the bestseller list"
~ assimilatebecome similar in sound.; "The nasal assimilates to the following consonant"
~ dissimilatebecome dissimilar or less similar.; "These two related tribes of people gradually dissimilated over time"
~ dissimilatebecome dissimilar by changing the sound qualities.; "These consonants dissimilate"
~ change magnitudechange in size or magnitude.
~ modifymake less severe or harsh or extreme.; "please modify this letter to make it more polite"; "he modified his views on same-gender marriage"
~ deadenbecome lifeless, less lively, intense, or active; lose life, force, or vigor.
~ breakbe broken in.; "If the new teacher won't break, we'll add some stress"
~ decay, dilapidate, crumblefall into decay or ruin.; "The unoccupied house started to decay"
~ mildew, moldbecome moldy; spoil due to humidity.; "The furniture molded in the old house"
~ hydratebecome hydrated and combine with water.
~ dry out, drybecome dry or drier.; "The laundry dries in the sun"
~ strengthengain strength.; "His body strengthened"
~ distill, distilundergo the process of distillation.
~ deoxidise, deoxidize, reduceto remove oxygen from a compound, or cause to react with hydrogen or form a hydride, or to undergo an increase in the number of electrons.
~ crackbreak into simpler molecules by means of heat.; "The petroleum cracked"
~ oxidise, oxidate, oxidizeadd oxygen to or combine with oxygen.
~ oxidate, oxidize, oxidiseenter into a combination with oxygen or become converted into an oxide.; "This metal oxidizes easily"
~ growbecome attached by or as if by the process of growth.; "The tree trunks had grown together"
~ mellow out, mellow, meltbecome more relaxed, easygoing, or genial.; "With age, he mellowed"
~ softenbecome soft or softer.; "The bread will soften if you pour some liquid on it"
~ ionise, ionizebecome converted into ions.
~ stabilise, stabilizebecome stable or more stable.; "The economy stabilized"
~ destabilise, destabilizebecome unstable.; "The economy destabilized rapidly"
~ lighten up, lightenbecome lighter.; "The room lightened up"
~ discolour, discolor, color, colourchange color, often in an undesired manner.; "The shirts discolored"
~ discolorlose color or turn colorless.; "The painting discolored"
~ narrow, contractmake or become more narrow or restricted.; "The selection was narrowed"; "The road narrowed"
~ darkenbecome dark or darker.; "The sky darkened"
~ dimbecome dim or lusterless.; "the lights dimmed and the curtain rose"
~ boilimmerse or be immersed in a boiling liquid, often for cooking purposes.; "boil potatoes"; "boil wool"
~ crack, check, breakbecome fractured; break or crack on the surface only.; "The glass cracked when it was heated"
~ transpirecome to light; become known.; "It transpired that she had worked as spy in East Germany"
~ resume, take upreturn to a previous location or condition.; "The painting resumed its old condition when we restored it"
~ change surfaceundergo or cause to undergo a change in the surface.
~ sublime, sublimatevaporize and then condense right back again.
~ cool down, cool off, coollose intensity.; "His enthusiasm cooled considerably"
~ warm upbecome more friendly or open.; "She warmed up after we had lunch together"
~ warm, warm upget warm or warmer.; "The soup warmed slowly on the stove"
~ transmute, metamorphose, transformchange in outward structure or looks.; "He transformed into a monster"; "The salesman metamorphosed into an ugly beetle"
~ convertchange religious beliefs, or adopt a religious belief.; "She converted to Buddhism"
~ dullbecome dull or lusterless in appearance; lose shine or brightness.; "the varnished table top dulled with time"
~ complexify, ramifyhave or develop complicating consequences.; "These actions will ramify"
~ americanise, americanizebecome American in character.; "After a year in Iowa, he has totally Americanized"
~ modernise, modernize, developbecome technologically advanced.; "Many countries in Asia are now developing at a very fast pace"; "Viet Nam is modernizing rapidly"
~ stiffenbecome stiff or stiffer.; "He stiffened when he saw his boss enter the room"
~ tightenbecome tight or tighter.; "The rope tightened"
~ conk out, go bad, break down, die, fail, give out, give way, break, gostop operating or functioning.; "The engine finally went"; "The car died on the road"; "The bus we travelled in broke down on the way to town"; "The coffee maker broke"; "The engine failed on the way to town"; "her eyesight went after the accident"
~ yield, give wayend resistance, as under pressure or force.; "The door yielded to repeated blows with a battering ram"
~ harden, induratebecome hard or harder.; "The wax hardened"
~ harden, induratemake hard or harder.; "The cold hardened the butter"
~ suffuseto become overspread as with a fluid, a colour, a gleam of light.; "His whole frame suffused with a cold dew"
~ hushbecome quiet or still; fall silent.; "hush my baby!"
~ normalise, normalizebecome normal or return to its normal state.; "Let us hope that relations with this country will normalize soon"
~ reorientset or arrange in a new or different determinate position.; "Orient the house towards the South"
~ purifybecome clean or pure or free of guilt and sin.; "The hippies came to the ashram in order to purify"
~ digestbecome assimilated into the body.; "Protein digests in a few hours"
~ regressgo back to a statistical means.
~ foulbecome soiled and dirty.
~ decalcifylose calcium or calcium compounds.
~ industrialise, industrializedevelop industry; become industrial.; "The nations of South East Asia will quickly industrialize and catch up with the West"
~ decarboxylatelose a carboxyl group.; "the compound decarboxylated"
~ spotbecome spotted.; "This dress spots quickly"
~ incur, obtain, receive, get, findreceive a specified treatment (abstract).; "These aspects of civilization do not find expression or receive an interpretation"; "His movie received a good review"; "I got nothing but trouble for my good intentions"
~ acetylate, acetylise, acetylizereceive substitution of an acetyl group.; "the compounds acetylated"
~ take on, acquire, assume, adopt, taketake on a certain form, attribute, or aspect.; "His voice took on a sad tone"; "The story took a new turn"; "he adopted an air of superiority"; "She assumed strange manners"; "The gods assume human or animal form in these fables"
~ primassume a prim appearance.; "They mince and prim"
~ capacitatecause (spermatozoa) to undergo the physical changes necessary to fertilize an egg.
~ caseatebecome cheeselike.; "necrotic tissue caseates"
~ caseateturn into cheese.; "The milk caseated"
~ clinkerturn to clinker or form clinker under excessive heat in burning.
~ curebe or become preserved.; "the apricots cure in the sun"
~ dawnbecome light.; "It started to dawn, and we had to get up"
~ salinateadd salt to.; "salinated solution"
~ desalinate, desalinise, desalinize, desaltremove salt from.; "desalinate water"
~ shallow, shoalbecome shallow.; "the lake shallowed over time"
~ steepenbecome steeper.; "The mountain side has steepened"
~ superannuatebecome obsolete.
~ ulcerateundergo ulceration.; "Her stomach ulcerated"
~ vitrifyundergo vitrification; become glassy or glass-like.
~ vulcanise, vulcanizeundergo vulcanization.; "vulcanize rubber"
~ pall, dullbecome less interesting or attractive.
~ become flat, pall, dielose sparkle or bouquet.; "wine and beer can pall"
~ saponifybecome converted into soap by being hydrolized into an acid and alcohol as a result of being treated with an alkali.; "the oil saponified"
~ move, go, runprogress by being changed.; "The speech has to go through several more drafts"; "run through your presentation before the meeting"
~ comereach or enter a state, relation, condition, use, or position.; "The water came to a boil"; "We came to understand the true meaning of life"; "Their anger came to a boil"; "I came to realize the true meaning of life"; "The shoes came untied"; "come into contact with a terrorist group"; "his face went red"; "your wish will come true"
~ catchbe struck or affected by.; "catch fire"; "catch the mood"
~ catch onbecome popular.; "This fashion caught on in Paris"
~ grow, developgrow emotionally or mature.; "The child developed beautifully in her new kindergarten"; "When he spent a summer at camp, the boy grew noticeably and no longer showed some of his old adolescent behavior"
~ flychange quickly from one emotional state to another.; "fly into a rage"
~ develop, evolve, acquiregain through experience.; "I acquired a strong aversion to television"; "Children must develop a sense of right and wrong"; "Dave developed leadership qualities in his new position"; "develop a passion for painting"
~ assibilatechange into a sibilant.; "In the syllable /si/, the /s/ sibilates in Japanese"
~ smoothenbecome smooth.
~ turn onbecome hostile towards.; "The dog suddenly turned on the mailman"
~ dropchange from one level to another.; "She dropped into army jargon"
~ break intochange pace.; "The dancers broke into a cha-cha"; "The horse broke into a gallop"
~ deepen, changebecome deeper in tone.; "His voice began to change when he was 12 years old"; "Her voice deepened when she whispered the password"
~ concretise, concretizebecome specific.; "the idea concretized in her mind"
~ decayundergo decay or decomposition.; "The body started to decay and needed to be cremated"
~ commute, transposeexchange positions without a change in value.; "These operators commute with each other"
~ introjectincorporate (attitudes or ideas) into one's personality unconsciously.
~ shiftchange in quality.; "His tone shifted"
~ swingalternate dramatically between high and low values.; "his mood swings"; "the market is swinging up and down"
~ fallbe cast down.; "his eyes fell"
~ fallassume a disappointed or sad expression.; "Her face fell when she heard that she would be laid off"; "his crest fell"
~ reflateeconomics: experience reflation.; "The economy reflated after the Fed took extreme measures"
~ hydrolyse, hydrolyzeundergo hydrolysis; decompose by reacting with water.
~ fold up, foldbecome folded or folded up.; "The bed folds in a jiffy"
~ gelatinise, gelatinizebecome gelatinous or change into a jelly.; "the starch gelatinized when it was heated"
~ felt up, mat up, matt-up, matte, matte up, mat, feltchange texture so as to become matted and felt-like.; "The fabric felted up after several washes"
~ recombineundergo genetic recombination.; "The DNA can recombine"
~ feminise, feminizeassume (more) feminine characteristics.; "feminized language"; "feminized frogs"
~ obsolescebecome obsolete, fall into disuse.; "This word has not obsolesced, although it is rarely used"
~ plasticise, plasticizebecome plastic, as by having a plasticizer added.
~ recedebecome faint or more distant.; "the unhappy memories of her childhood receded as she grew older"
~ defervesceexperience an abatement of a fever.
~ incandescebecome incandescent or glow with heat.; "an incandescing body"
~ calcifybecome inflexible and unchanging.; "Old folks can calcify"
~ driftbe subject to fluctuation.; "The stock market drifted upward"
~ play outbecome spent or exhausted.; "The champion's strength played out fast"
~ conjugateundergo conjugation.
~ isomerise, isomerizechange into an isomer.
~ vaporise, evaporatechange into a vapor.; "The water evaporated in front of our eyes"
~ induratebecome fixed or established.; "indurated customs"
~ gradatepass imperceptibly from one degree, shade, or tone into another.; "The paint on these walls gradates but you don't see it"
~ keratinise, keratinizebecome horny and impregnated with keratin.
~ opacifybecome opaque.; "the tissue in the eye's cornea may opacify and the patient may go blind"
~ maturebecome due for repayment.; "These bonds mature in 2005"
~ rejuvenatedevelop youthful topographical features.; "the land rejuvenated"
~ sequesterundergo sequestration by forming a stable compound with an ion.; "The cations were sequestered"
~ transaminateundergo transfer from one compound to another.; "amino groups can transaminate"
~ vesiculatebecome vesicular or full of air cells.; "The organs vesiculated"
~ undulateincrease and decrease in volume or pitch, as if in waves.; "The singer's voice undulated"
~ vascularise, vascularizebecome vascular and have vessels that circulate fluids.; "The egg yolk vascularized"
~ crashundergo a sudden and severe downturn.; "the economy crashed"; "will the stock market crash again?"
~ professionalise, professionalizebecome professional or proceed in a professional manner or in an activity for pay or as a means of livelihood.
~ shiftchange phonetically as part of a systematic historical change.; "Grimm showed how the consonants shifted"
~ flip out, flipgo mad, go crazy.; "He flipped when he heard that he was being laid off"
~ gumbecome sticky.
~ repressblock the action of.
~ shearbecome deformed by forces tending to produce a shearing strain.
~ damagesuffer or be susceptible to damage.; "These fine china cups damage easily"
~ synthesizecombine and form a synthesis.; "Vitamin D only synthesizes when sunlight is available"
~ come around, come roundchange one's position or opinion.; "He came around to our point of view"
~ promotebe changed for a superior chess or checker piece.
~ divide, part, separatecome apart.; "The two pieces that we had glued separated"
~ format, arrangeset (printed matter) into a specific format.; "Format this letter so it can be printed out"
~ fall forfall in love with; become infatuated with.; "She fell for the man from Brazil"
~ move up, rise, ascendmove to a better position in life or to a better job.; "She ascended from a life of poverty to one of great"
~ change postureundergo a change in bodily posture.
~ settlebecome clear by the sinking of particles.; "the liquid gradually settled"
~ cave in, collapse, fall in, give way, founder, give, breakbreak down, literally or metaphorically.; "The wall collapsed"; "The business collapsed"; "The dam broke"; "The roof collapsed"; "The wall gave in"; "The roof finally gave under the weight of the ice"
~ undergopass through.; "The chemical undergoes a sudden change"; "The fluid undergoes shear"; "undergo a strange sensation"
~ solarise, solarizebecome overexposed.; "The film solarized"
~ occultbecome concealed or hidden from view or have its light extinguished.; "The beam of light occults every so often"
~ passtransfer to another; of rights or property.; "Our house passed under his official control"
~ pull up stakes, depart, leaveremove oneself from an association with or participation in.; "She wants to leave"; "The teenager left home"; "She left her position with the Red Cross"; "He left the Senate after two terms"; "after 20 years with the same company, she pulled up stakes"
~ liberalise, liberalizebecome more liberal.; "The laws liberalized after Prohibition"
~ stratifydevelop different social levels, classes, or castes.; "Society stratifies when the income gap widens"
~ democratise, democratizebecome (more) democratic; of nations.
~ loosen, relaxbecome less severe or strict.; "The rules relaxed after the new director arrived"
~ reticulateform a net or a network.
~ flocculateform into an aggregated lumpy or fluffy mass.; "the protoplasms flocculated"
~ carbonateturn into a carbonate.
~ come income into fashion; become fashionable.
~ go outgo out of fashion; become unfashionable.
~ stagnatecause to stagnate.; "There are marshes that stagnate the waters"
~ makeundergo fabrication or creation.; "This wool makes into a nice sweater"
~ frost over, ice over, ice upbecome covered with a layer of ice; of a surface such as a window.; "When the wings iced up, the pilot was forced to land his plane"
v. (change)12. change, shift, switchlay aside, abandon, or leave for another.; "switch to a different brand of beer"; "She switched psychiatrists"; "The car changed lanes"
~ exchange, convert, commute, changeexchange or replace with another, usually of the same kind or category.; "Could you convert my dollars into pounds?"; "He changed his name"; "convert centimeters into inches"; "convert holdings into shares"
~ changechange clothes; put on different clothes.; "Change before you go to the opera"
~ transitionmake or undergo a transition (from one state or system to another).; "The airline transitioned to more fuel-efficient jets"; "The adagio transitioned into an allegro"
~ shiftchange gears.; "you have to shift when you go down a steep hill"
~ breakchange suddenly from one tone quality or register to another.; "Her voice broke to a whisper when she started to talk about her children"
~ channel-surf, surfswitch channels, on television.
~ leap, jumppass abruptly from one state or topic to another.; "leap into fame"; "jump to a conclusion"; "jump from one thing to another"
~ diphthongise, diphthongizechange from a simple vowel to a diphthong.; "This vowel diphthongized in Germanic"
~ cutmake an abrupt change of image or sound.; "cut from one scene to another"
~ breakchange directions suddenly.
v. (change)13. changechange clothes; put on different clothes.; "Change before you go to the opera"
~ dress, get dressedput on clothes.; "we had to dress quickly"; "dress the patient"; "Can the child dress by herself?"
~ switch, change, shiftlay aside, abandon, or leave for another.; "switch to a different brand of beer"; "She switched psychiatrists"; "The car changed lanes"
v. (change)14. change, commute, convert, exchangeexchange or replace with another, usually of the same kind or category.; "Could you convert my dollars into pounds?"; "He changed his name"; "convert centimeters into inches"; "convert holdings into shares"
~ rectifyconvert into direct current.; "rectify alternating current"
~ utilizeconvert (from an investment trust to a unit trust).
~ capitalise, capitalizeconvert (a company's reserve funds) into capital.
~ replacesubstitute a person or thing for (another that is broken or inefficient or lost or no longer working or yielding what is expected).; "He replaced the old razor blade"; "We need to replace the secretary that left a month ago"; "the insurance will replace the lost income"; "This antique vase can never be replaced"
~ launderconvert illegally obtained funds into legal ones.
~ switch, change, shiftlay aside, abandon, or leave for another.; "switch to a different brand of beer"; "She switched psychiatrists"; "The car changed lanes"
~ breakexchange for smaller units of money.; "I had to break a $100 bill just to buy the candy"
v. (possession)15. change, exchange, interchangegive to, and receive from, one another.; "Would you change places with me?"; "We have been exchanging letters for a year"
~ transfercause to change ownership.; "I transferred my stock holdings to my children"
~ sellexchange or deliver for money or its equivalent.; "He sold his house in January"; "She sells her body to survive and support her drug habit"
~ cash, cash inexchange for cash.; "I cashed the check as soon as it arrived in the mail"
~ ransom, redeemexchange or buy back for money; under threat.
~ redeemto turn in (vouchers or coupons) and receive something in exchange.
~ stand in, sub, substitute, fill inbe a substitute.; "The young teacher had to substitute for the sick colleague"; "The skim milk substitutes for cream--we are on a strict diet"
~ swap, swop, switch, tradeexchange or give (something) in exchange for.
~ barterexchange goods without involving money.
~ trade in, tradeturn in as payment or part payment for a purchase.; "trade in an old car for a new one"
v. (motion)16. change, transferchange from one vehicle or transportation line to another.; "She changed in Chicago on her way to the East coast"
~ go, locomote, move, travelchange location; move, travel, or proceed, also metaphorically.; "How fast does your new car go?"; "We travelled from Rome to Naples by bus"; "The policemen went from door to door looking for the suspect"; "The soldiers moved towards the city in an attempt to take it before night fell"; "news travelled fast"
v. (change)17. change, deepenbecome deeper in tone.; "His voice began to change when he was 12 years old"; "Her voice deepened when she whispered the password"
~ changeundergo a change; become different in essence; losing one's or its original nature.; "She changed completely as she grew older"; "The weather changed last night"
v. (change)18. changeremove or replace the coverings of.; "Father had to learn how to change the baby"; "After each guest we changed the bed linens"
~ replacesubstitute a person or thing for (another that is broken or inefficient or lost or no longer working or yielding what is expected).; "He replaced the old razor blade"; "We need to replace the secretary that left a month ago"; "the insurance will replace the lost income"; "This antique vase can never be replaced"
exchange
n. (phenomenon)1. exchangechemical process in which one atom or ion or group changes places with another.
~ chemical phenomenonany natural phenomenon involving chemistry (as changes to atoms or molecules).
~ photochemical exchangean exchange produced by the chemical action of radiant energy (especially light).
n. (communication)2. exchangea mutual expression of views (especially an unpleasant one).; "they had a bitter exchange"
~ conversationthe use of speech for informal exchange of views or ideas or information etc..
n. (act)3. exchange, interchangethe act of changing one thing for another thing.; "Adam was promised immortality in exchange for his disobedience"; "there was an interchange of prisoners"
~ group actionaction taken by a group of people.
~ trade-off, tradeoffan exchange that occurs as a compromise.; "I faced a tradeoff between eating and buying my medicine"
n. (act)4. exchangethe act of giving something in return for something received.; "deductible losses on sales or exchanges of property are allowable"
~ transaction, dealing, dealingsthe act of transacting within or between groups (as carrying on commercial activities).; "no transactions are possible without him"; "he has always been honest is his dealings with me"
~ logrollingact of exchanging favors for mutual gain; especially trading of influence or votes among legislators to gain passage of certain projects.
n. (artifact)5. central, exchange, telephone exchangea workplace that serves as a telecommunications facility where lines from telephones can be connected together to permit communication.
~ centrex(CENTRal EXchange) a kind of telephone exchange.
~ patchboard, plugboard, switchboardtelephone central where circuits are completed with patchcords.
~ phone system, telephone systema communication system that transmits sound between distant points.
~ workplace, worka place where work is done.; "he arrived at work early today"
n. (artifact)6. exchangea workplace for buying and selling; open only to members.
~ commodities exchange, commodities market, commodity exchangean exchange for buying and selling commodities for future delivery.
~ corn exchangean exchange where grains are bought and sold.
~ trading floor, floora large room in a exchange where the trading is done.; "he is a floor trader"
~ securities market, stock exchange, stock marketan exchange where security trading is conducted by professional stockbrokers.
~ workplace, worka place where work is done.; "he arrived at work early today"
n. (act)7. exchange, rally(sports) an unbroken sequence of several successive strokes.; "after a short rally Connors won the point"
~ squash rackets, squash racquets, squasha game played in an enclosed court by two or four players who strike the ball with long-handled rackets.
~ badmintona game played on a court with light long-handled rackets used to volley a shuttlecock over a net.
~ lawn tennis, tennisa game played with rackets by two or four players who hit a ball back and forth over a net that divides the court.
~ ping-pong, table tennisa game (trademark Ping-Pong) resembling tennis but played on a table with paddles and a light hollow ball.
~ group actionaction taken by a group of people.
n. (act)8. exchange, interchangereciprocal transfer of equivalent sums of money (especially the currencies of different countries).; "he earns his living from the interchange of currency"
~ commerce, commercialism, mercantilismtransactions (sales and purchases) having the objective of supplying commodities (goods and services).
~ conversionact of exchanging one type of money or security for another.
~ barter, swap, swop, tradean equal exchange.; "we had no money so we had to live by barter"
~ foreign exchangethe system by which one currency is exchanged for another; enables international transactions to take place.
n. (act)9. commutation, exchange, substitutionthe act of putting one thing or person in the place of another:.; "he sent Smith in for Jones but the substitution came too late to help"
~ changethe action of changing something.; "the change of government had no impact on the economy"; "his change on abortion cost him the election"
~ replacement, replacingthe act of furnishing an equivalent person or thing in the place of another.; "replacing the star will not be easy"
~ subrogation(law) the act of substituting of one creditor for another.
~ weaning, ablactationthe act of substituting other food for the mother's milk in the diet of a child or young mammal.
n. (act)10. exchange(chess) gaining (or losing) a rook in return for a knight or bishop.; "black lost the exchange"
~ capturethe removal of an opponent's piece from the chess board.
~ chess game, chessa board game for two players who move their 16 pieces according to specific rules; the object is to checkmate the opponent's king.
n. (act)11. exchange(chess) the capture by both players (usually on consecutive moves) of pieces of equal value.; "the endgame began after the exchange of queens"
~ capturethe removal of an opponent's piece from the chess board.
~ chess game, chessa board game for two players who move their 16 pieces according to specific rules; the object is to checkmate the opponent's king.
v. (change)12. exchange, switch, switch overchange over, change around, as to a new order or sequence.
~ change by reversal, reverse, turnchange to the contrary.; "The trend was reversed"; "the tides turned against him"; "public opinion turned when it was revealed that the president had an affair with a White House intern"
v. (social)13. exchangehand over one and receive another, approximately equivalent.; "exchange prisoners"; "exchange employees between branches of the company"
~ reassign, transfertransfer somebody to a different position or location of work.
~ alternateexchange people temporarily to fulfill certain jobs and functions.
v. (possession)14. exchange, interchange, replace, substituteput in the place of another; switch seemingly equivalent items.; "the con artist replaced the original with a fake Rembrandt"; "substitute regular milk with fat-free milk"; "synonyms can be interchanged without a changing the context's meaning"
~ alter, change, modifycause to change; make different; cause a transformation.; "The advent of the automobile may have altered the growth pattern of the city"; "The discussion has changed my thinking about the issue"
~ shiftmove and exchange for another.; "shift the date for our class reunion"
~ reducesimplify the form of a mathematical equation of expression by substituting one term for another.
~ truncatereplace a corner by a plane.
~ retoolprovide (a workshop or factory) with new tools.
~ subrogatesubstitute one creditor for another, as in the case where an insurance company sues the person who caused an accident for the insured.
v. (change)15. commute, convert, exchangeexchange a penalty for a less severe one.
~ alter, change, modifycause to change; make different; cause a transformation.; "The advent of the automobile may have altered the growth pattern of the city"; "The discussion has changed my thinking about the issue"
replace
v. (change)1. replacesubstitute a person or thing for (another that is broken or inefficient or lost or no longer working or yielding what is expected).; "He replaced the old razor blade"; "We need to replace the secretary that left a month ago"; "the insurance will replace the lost income"; "This antique vase can never be replaced"
~ exchange, convert, commute, changeexchange or replace with another, usually of the same kind or category.; "Could you convert my dollars into pounds?"; "He changed his name"; "convert centimeters into inches"; "convert holdings into shares"
~ changeremove or replace the coverings of.; "Father had to learn how to change the baby"; "After each guest we changed the bed linens"
~ novatereplace with something new, especially an old obligation by a new one.
~ regenerate, renewreestablish on a new, usually improved, basis or make new or like new.; "We renewed our friendship after a hiatus of twenty years"; "They renewed their membership"
~ supercede, supersede, supervene upon, supplant, replacetake the place or move into the position of.; "Smith replaced Miller as CEO after Miller left"; "the computer has supplanted the slide rule"; "Mary replaced Susan as the team's captain and the highest-ranked player in the school"
v. (social)2. replace, supercede, supersede, supervene upon, supplanttake the place or move into the position of.; "Smith replaced Miller as CEO after Miller left"; "the computer has supplanted the slide rule"; "Mary replaced Susan as the team's captain and the highest-ranked player in the school"
~ replacesubstitute a person or thing for (another that is broken or inefficient or lost or no longer working or yielding what is expected).; "He replaced the old razor blade"; "We need to replace the secretary that left a month ago"; "the insurance will replace the lost income"; "This antique vase can never be replaced"
~ put back, replaceput something back where it belongs.; "replace the book on the shelf after you have finished reading it"; "please put the clean dishes back in the cabinet when you have washed them"
~ deputise, deputize, step in, substituteact as a substitute.; "She stood in for the soprano who suffered from a cold"
~ displace, preempttake the place of or have precedence over.; "live broadcast of the presidential debate preempts the regular news hour"; "discussion of the emergency situation will preempt the lecture by the professor"
~ usurptake the place of.; "gloom had usurped mirth at the party after the news of the terrorist act broke"
~ oustremove and replace.; "The word processor has ousted the typewriter"
~ come after, succeed, followbe the successor (of).; "Carter followed Ford"; "Will Charles succeed to the throne?"
v. (contact)3. put back, replaceput something back where it belongs.; "replace the book on the shelf after you have finished reading it"; "please put the clean dishes back in the cabinet when you have washed them"
~ hang upput a telephone receiver back in its cradle.
~ lay, place, put, set, position, poseput into a certain place or abstract location.; "Put your things here"; "Set the tray down"; "Set the dogs on the scent of the missing children"; "Place emphasis on a certain point"
~ supercede, supersede, supervene upon, supplant, replacetake the place or move into the position of.; "Smith replaced Miller as CEO after Miller left"; "the computer has supplanted the slide rule"; "Mary replaced Susan as the team's captain and the highest-ranked player in the school"
supersede