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transfigure (v.)

early 13c., transfiguren, "gloriously alter the appearance of," especially in reference to Christ (see transformation), from Old French transfigurer "change, transform" (12c.), and directly from Latin transfigurare "change the shape of," from trans "across, beyond" (see trans-) + figurare "to form, fashion," from figura "to form, shape," from figura "a shape, form, figure" (from PIE root *dheigh- "to form, build"). Related: Transfigured; transfiguring.

Also, "be spiritually transformed in conformity to Christ" (late 14c.). General (non-Christian) senses of "change the outward form or appearance of, alter the shape" are by late 14c., including "adopt a role" (of an actor), "be metamorphosed" (by magic). The intransitive meaning "change in appearance or character" (1840) is rare. Also compare transfigurate (v.) "transform, change" (early 15c.), from the past-participle stem of the Latin verb.

also from early 13c.
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Trends of transfigure

updated on June 05, 2024

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