Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigSuggestions(1)
Dictionary
be metamorphosed
verb
To undergo metamorphosis
Exact(6)
And this is Ditie's final image of comic chutzpah: in his absolute disintegration, he will be metamorphosed into the entire world itself.
And the fears of his opponents that he would quickly be metamorphosed into an authoritarian dictator have so far proved misplaced.
It is now known that protoliths other than basalt also can be metamorphosed to pressures and temperatures characteristic of the eclogite facies, and a wide variety of mineral assemblages can be stable at these conditions, including several hydrous mineral phases.
Some argue that the subjects that form the centre of the KS3 curriculum should be metamorphosed into integration through which seams of skills and competencies will be lain down.
He playfully demonstrated how one face could be metamorphosed into another, turning his mother into Marlene Dietrich and Gwyneth Paltrow into James Dean, fascinated that when they looked the part, the behaviour of his subjects changed - he thought make-up allowed people to examine other aspects of their personalities without taking risks.
These plutons slowly cooled to form the Zoroaster Granite; part of which would later be metamorphosed into gneiss.
Similar(54)
Your stepdaughter may well be metamorphosing into an unbearable, lazy, superficial adult, or she could simply be behaving like the rest of her contemporaries.
Ms. Mein's figurative sculpture "Le Songe," or "The Dream," represents a distorted squatting female form that appears to be metamorphosing into another organic mass, something of a modern-day Daphne.
"Daughter" (1999), a life-size Little Red Riding Hood made of paper, cloth, and hair, appears to be metamorphosing into a werewolf; an electronic soundtrack, by the composer Margaret De Wys, contributes appropriate growls and squeaks.
Slicing up each sample crosswise, like a Sicilian pizza, into clumps of a mere 30 or so cells, he picks out and keeps the squares that do not seem to be metamorphosing into anything particular.
(The Nutcracker starts as a doll, then becomes human-size and then is metamorphosed into a prince).
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com