| 1. | to change in form, appearance, or structure; metamorphose. |
| 2. | to change in condition, nature, or character; convert. |
| 3. | to change into another substance; transmute. |
| 4. | Electricity.
|
| 5. | Mathematics. to change the form of (a figure, expression, etc.) without in general changing the value. |
| 6. | Physics. to change into another form of energy. |
| 7. | to undergo a change in form, appearance, or character; become transformed. |
| 8. | Mathematics.
|
| 9. | the result of a transformation. |
| 10. | a transformation. |
| 11. | Logic. transformation (def. 5). |
| 12. | Linguistics. a structure derived by a transformation. |
n]
| 1. | the act or process of transforming. |
| 2. | the state of being transformed. |
| 3. | change in form, appearance, nature, or character. |
| 4. | Theater. a seemingly miraculous change in the appearance of scenery or actors in view of the audience. |
| 5. | Logic. Also called transform. one of a set of algebraic formulas used to express the relations between elements, sets, etc., that form parts of a given system. |
| 6. | Mathematics.
|
| 7. | Linguistics.
|
| 8. | Genetics. the transfer of genetic material from one cell to another resulting in a genetic change in the recipient cell. |
| 9. | a wig or hairpiece for a woman. |
trans·form (trāns-fôrm') v. trans·formed, trans·form·ing, trans·forms v. tr.
To undergo a transformation. n. (trāns'fôrm') The result, especially a mathematical quantity or linguistic construction, of a transformation. [Middle English transformen, from Old French transformer, from Latin trānsfōrmāre : trāns-, trans- + fōrma, form.] trans·form'a·ble adj. |
transformation trans·for·ma·tion (trāns'fər-mā'shən, -fôr-)
n.
See metamorphosis.
The genetic alteration of a bacterial cell by introduction of DNA from another cell or from a virus.
transformation (trāns'fər-mā'shən) Pronunciation Key
|