Crossword clues for morphs
morphs
Wiktionary
n. (plural of morph English) vb. (en-third-person singular of: morph)
Usage examples of "morphs".
They know that morphs had even infiltrated the home of one of their most important Controllers -- Chapman.
It was easy for Jake and Rachel, in their wolf morphs, to leap nimbly through.
And then I began one of my least favorite morphs - the common housefly.
Ross had heard tales of the morphs during the twenty-five-odd years he had served the Word.
Regardless, he was struck by the possibility that humans and gypsy morphs alike possessed a spiritual essence that lived on after their bodies were gone.
Andwiththe intense vision of our bird morphs, we could see whatever we were supposed to see from a quarter of a mile away.
The problem with morphs is that they are never exactly the same twice in a row.
She quickly morphs into form as she moves toward the western end of her chambers, where the Witness holds court and receives visitors.
She releases the Other, morphs herself into a spinning vortex, and prepares to spread out thin, as loosely knit as possible and still hold shape, to touch as many Others as she can.
She morphs herself into a living spear, the greatest spear the universe has ever seen, then coils, launches, and skewers the Vortas as easily as plump fruit.
Then she morphs herself thin as a pin, curls up into a tiny ball, and throbs, aching and alone, in a hard stone corner of Bleak Prime.
This morning, the day after I became a secret agent for the Goddess of Love, Athena quantum teleports herself down from Olympos and morphs into a Trojan, the spearman Laodocus.
First, the war god morphs into the runner Acamas, prince of Thrace, and runs to and from among the milling Trojans, urging them back into the battle to push the Greeks out of the salient they have created following Diomedes into the Trojan lines.
An atomic anionizer is just what its name would imply: a device that morphs normal atoms into atoms with an extreme negative charge by emitting massive amounts, to the tune of many millions of moles, of solitary electrons into the air through a bombing device.