distort
verb /dɪˈstɔːt/
/dɪˈstɔːrt/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they distort | /dɪˈstɔːt/ /dɪˈstɔːrt/ |
he / she / it distorts | /dɪˈstɔːts/ /dɪˈstɔːrts/ |
past simple distorted | /dɪˈstɔːtɪd/ /dɪˈstɔːrtɪd/ |
past participle distorted | /dɪˈstɔːtɪd/ /dɪˈstɔːrtɪd/ |
-ing form distorting | /dɪˈstɔːtɪŋ/ /dɪˈstɔːrtɪŋ/ |
- a fairground mirror that distorts your shape
- The loudspeaker seemed to distort his voice.
- Newspapers are often guilty of distorting the truth.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- grossly
- seriously
- severely
- …
Word Originlate 15th cent. (in the sense ‘twist to one side’): from Latin distort- ‘twisted apart’, from the verb distorquere, from dis- ‘apart’ + torquere ‘to twist’.