Similar words: distort, contorted, aborted, reportedly, history, historic, historian, historical. Meaning: [dɪ'stɔːt] adj. 1. strained or wrenched out of normal shape 2. so badly formed or out of shape as to be ugly 3. having an intended meaning altered or misrepresented.
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61. And of course you can barre this easily - power chords in 5 octaves, distorted bass.
62. Newspaper readers are usually given a simplified and often distorted version of events.
63. In higher doses it can happen. Thought processes become distorted and you hallucinate.
64. In the absence of broader political democracy, active community participation gets suppressed and distorted.
65. It may be very colloquial and the voices are often distorted.
66. I tried to shout like the two of them, but my cry came out strangled and distorted.
67. It was distorted and blackened by the heat, but Charles knew immediately what it was.
68. Is knowledge lost from memory or does it change, becoming vague and imprecise, or distorted, or disconnected and fragmented?
69. But the larger picture is systematically distorted by the military and political calculations concerning the strategic uses of information and disinformation.
70. Hearing people distorted the temporal sequence much more than did deaf people, with bilinguals coming somewhere between.
71. The world picture is distorted by being seen through human eyes.
72. The Colonel's cool compassion showed his command of the situation: no moment of fury distorted his fearless and level-headed view.
73. The fierce, distorted blind face of the creature appeared at ground level, on its side, searching.
74. To obtain such information is costly and there are people or groups with an incentive to provide only partial or distorted information.
75. This has been distorted in the press as tantamount to planning violent attacks on the summit.
76. It does not necessarily call for an ethical content, so facts are often distorted or falsified for self-interest.
77. I do not want the comparative figures to be distorted.
78. In the resultant culture clash Guinness drowns, heroism subverted by duty, reality distorted by the military mindset.
79. For example, the beat can be distorted if the coronary arteries are not wired correctly inside the heart.
80. Schizophrenia is a brain disorder that can cause, among other things, visual and auditory hallucinations, delusions and distorted thinking.
81. People, they build these institutions like governments or rock bands or anything, and reality is distorted.
82. "The lawyers distorted what I wanted to say," recollects Hansen grimly.
83. He has some severe but convincing strictures on the impoverished and distorted contribution of feminist studies to his subject.
84. She looked at Fergus's dim reflection, distorted in the glass, then tried to re-focus on her own image.
85. They are forced to return or, all too frequently, murdered to restore a distorted sense of honour.
86. They disappear beneath the shallow waves, no doubt seeing a distorted light source peering at them.
87. This distorted form of Buddhism spread rapidly thanks to a vast network of male and female monastic communities.
87. Sentencedict.com is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find nice sentences for a large number of words.
88. A natural and innocent experience like weeping becomes sullied and distorted.
89. And even when revolution or military defeat should have opened eyes, distorted versions of reality survive.
90. Funhouse mirrors, which are not flat, cause images to be distorted.
More similar words: distort, contorted, aborted, reportedly, history, historic, historian, historical, prehistoric, historically, distributor, distributed, distractedly, forte, vortex, shorten, portend, reporter, supporter, shortened, inverted, diverted, asserted, foreshorten, postmortem, post-mortem, shortening, post mortem, converted, storm.