Deface
11deface — transitive verb Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French *desfacer, *deffacer, from des de + face front, face Date: 14th century 1. to mar the appearance of ; injure by effacing significant details < deface an inscription > 2. impair …
12deface — verb Deface is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑vandal …
13deface — [[t]dɪfe͟ɪs[/t]] defaces, defacing, defaced VERB If someone defaces something such as a wall or a notice, they spoil it by writing or drawing things on it. [V n] It s illegal to deface banknotes …
14deface — de•face [[t]dɪˈfeɪs[/t]] v. t. faced, fac•ing 1) to mar the surface or appearance of; disfigure 2) to make illegible: to deface a bond[/ex] • Etymology: 1275–1325; ME < OF desfacier=des dis I+facier (der. of face face) de•face′a•ble, adj.… …
15deface — /dəˈfeɪs / (say duh fays) verb (t) (defaced, defacing) 1. to mar the face or appearance of; disfigure. 2. to blot out; obliterate; efface. {Middle English deface(n), from French (obsolete) defacer, earlier desfacier, from des dis 1 + face face}… …
16Deface (film) — DEFACE Directed by John Arlotto Produced by John Arlotto, Roman Wyden Written by …
17Deface the Music — Studio album by Utopia Released October 1980 Genre …
18Deface the Music — Album par Utopia Sortie octobre 1980 Durée 32:06 Genre pop rock Producteur Todd Rundgren Label Bears …
19deface — verb a) To damage something in a visible or conspicuous manner. That wondrous frame where melody began / Lay as a tomb defaced that no eye cared to scan. b) To void or devalue; to nullify or …
20deface — Synonyms and related words: batter, blemish, blot, check, cicatrize, contort, crack, craze, damage, deform, demolish, destroy, dilapidate, disfigure, disproportion, distort, dysphemize, flaw, harm, impair, injure, kink, look a fright, look a mess …