Dictionary
deformed
verb
Past of deform
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The word “deformed” is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe someone or something that has been changed in shape, or is not normal in appearance. For example: “The car was severely deformed after the accident.”.
Exact(60)
If, in the experiment above, it were to be claimed that space is Euclidean but our candidates for straight lines are deformed it should be possible to vary the degree of deformation.
This explanation aside, in other places, these same radical feminists cited above join other feminists in suggesting that only some of women's desires are deformed, and that women are not entirely under the sway of their deformed desires since these desires can be outweighed by competing desires women have for their own welfare.
An examination of the spar found it was deformed as if in an explosion.
The writer himself will hope so: the death threat had "deformed" the past ten years for him, he said last week, as he wondered if he should ask for an apology.
For boys, the likes of G.I. Joe have mutated into teams of fighters who travel across galaxies and time, armed to the canines with light sabres and lasers, fighting horribly deformed foes.
Unfortunately the enterprise is deformed by the government's over-ambitious promises on renewable energy.Into the windRenewable energy is a means to many worthwhile ends.
At room temperature it was actually liquid, and thus flowed when deformed, rather than breaking.The result, as they report in Advanced Functional Materials, is an antenna that can be housed in a variety of covers, appropriate to different uses.
Mr Topolanek worries that EU diplomacy towards Russia has been "deformed" by some countries' business interests.
Yukio Edano, the government's chief spokesman, said that it was possible the core reactor had been "deformed" by its exposure above water, but he denied that it was a meltdown.
After the military coup of 1964 "we were all deformed by revolutionary Marxism", says Eduardo Giannetti, a liberal economist (his 29-year-old son was among the Paulista panellists).
This is because the sense of touch seems to depend far more on the way in which the skin is deformed and stretched than it does on the degree of pressure applied.
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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