What is another word for transfiguration?

Pronunciation: [tɹansfˌɪɡjʊɹˈe͡ɪʃən] (IPA)

The word "transfiguration" refers to the act of changing or transforming something or someone into a new form. Synonyms of this word include metamorphosis, conversion, mutation, alteration, variation, transition, transmutation, and transmogrification. While each of these words has a slightly different connotation, they all describe a change from one state to another. For example, metamorphosis often refers to a dramatic transformation, such as a caterpillar becoming a butterfly, while conversion usually refers to a change in belief or religion. Alteration and variation both describe a change in appearance or behavior, while transmutation and transmogrification suggest a magical or supernatural process.

Synonyms for Transfiguration:

What are the hypernyms for Transfiguration?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the hyponyms for Transfiguration?

Hyponyms are more specific words categorized under a broader term, known as a hypernym.

What are the opposite words for transfiguration?

The word "transfiguration" refers to a change in form or appearance, often with a spiritual or religious connotation. Antonyms for this term could include words like stagnation, deterioration, or decline, which all suggest a lack of positive transformation or improvement. Other antonyms might include words like stasis, rigidity, or immutability, which suggest a lack of flexibility or adaptability. Alternatively, words like distortion or ugliness could be considered antonyms, as they imply a negative or unappealing transformation. Ultimately, antonyms for "transfiguration" all carry a sense of unwanted change or a lack of positive growth and progress.

What are the antonyms for Transfiguration?

Usage examples for Transfiguration

As they had been together on the Mount of transfiguration, together in Gethsemane, together in the hall of Caiaphas, so now they remained together in spirit until the day of Peter's martyrdom came.
"The Making of an Apostle"
R. J. Campbell
But his frank, honest face reassured her, and she said: And, I'm proud to say, I'm not only a medium, but I am possessed of the power that is called impersonation or transfiguration.
"The Come Back"
Carolyn Wells
He wes transfigured that nicht, for a'm judging there's nae transfiguration like luve.
"Beside the Bonnie Brier Bush"
Ian Maclaren

Famous quotes with Transfiguration

  • Art is creative for the sake of realization, not for amusement... for transfiguration, not for the sake of play.
    Max Beckmann
  • The passage of the mythological herois inward—into depths where obscure resistances are overcome, and long lost, forgotten powers are revivified, to be made available for the transfiguration of the world. ...Something of the light that blazes invisible within the abysses of its normally opaque materiality breaks forth, with an increasing uproar. The dreadful mutilations are then seen as shadows, only, of an immanent, imperishable eternity; time yields to glory; and the world sings with the prodigious, angelic, but perhaps finally monotonous, siren music of the spheres. Like happy families, the myths and the worlds redeemed are all alike.
    Joseph Campbell
  • It often happens that an old family, with traditions that are entirely practical, sober and bourgeois, undergoes in its declining days a kind of artistic transfiguration.
    Thomas Mann
  • In the time of Jesus the mount of transfiguration was on the way to the cross. In our day the cross is on the way to the mount of transfiguration. If you would be on the mountain. you must consent to pass over the road to it.
    Henry Clay Trumbull
  • Nothing moves young people so much as to witness a sublime and virile gloom. Michelangelo's thinker staring down into the abyss of his own thoughts, Beethoven's poignantly drawn lips; these tragical masks of universal suffering touch the crude emotions of youth far more than Mozart's silver melodies or the crystalline light that radiates from Leonardo's figures. Being itself beauty, youth has no need of transfiguration. In the superabundance of its vital forces, it is allured by the tragical, and in its inexperience, is prone to accept the embraces of melancholy. That, too, is why youth is always ready for danger, and ever willing to extend a brotherly hand towards mental pain.
    Stefan Zweig

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