to mar the appearance or beauty of; deform; deface: Our old towns are increasingly disfigured by tasteless new buildings.
2.
to mar the effect or excellence of: His reputation was disfigured by instances of political favoritism.
Origin: 1325–75; Middle English disfiguren < Anglo-French, Old French desfigurer, equivalent to des-dis-1 + -figurer, verbal derivative of figurefigure
late 14c., from O.Fr. desfigurer, from M.L. diffigurare, from L. dis- (see dis-) + figura "figure," from figurare "to figure" (see figure). Related: Disfigured; disfigurement.