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Definition of Change surface
1. Verb. Undergo or cause to undergo a change in the surface.
Specialized synonyms: Level, Level Off, Crust, Buckle, Heave, Warp, Curl, Curve, Kink, Unfurl, Unroll, Roll Up, Wrap Up, Marbleise, Marbleize, Smooth, Smoothen, Roughen, Fold, Fold Up, Turn Up, Even, Even Out, Flush, Level, Tease, Impress, Imprint, Blob, Blot, Fleck, Spot
Lexicographical Neighbors of Change Surface
Literary usage of Change surface
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Concord Lectures on Philosophy, Comprising Outlines of All the Lectures at by Concord School of Philosophy (1883)
"Emerson calls the view of the law of change " surface," as if the seeing of a
line as a ..."
2. The Journal of Speculative Philosophy: Ed. by Wm. T. Harris edited by William Torrey Harris (1884)
"(4) Emerson calls the view of the law of change " surface," as if the seeing of
a line as a whole were the seeing of a surface. ..."
3. Bulletin by United States Bureau of Mines (1915)
"... partly owned by others their title was not divested or lost by the amended
location. Teller, In re, 26 LD 484, p. 486. 6. RIGHT TO change surface LINES. ..."
4. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1896)
"Anything, therefore, that tends to change surface drainage into subdrainage is
to be encouraged. If there were, therefore, no other means by which a forest ..."
5. This Dynamic Earth: The Story of Plate Tectonicsby W. Jackquelyne Klous, Robert I. Tilling by W. Jackquelyne Klous, Robert I. Tilling (1996)
"Exactly how a cooled-down Eart change surface conditions—and wheth planet will
still be habitable—nobody 1< Fortunately, these changes will not hap many ..."
6. Surface Temperature Reconstructions for the Last 2,000 Years by National Research Council (U.S.) (2006)
"How central are large-scale surface temperature reconstructions to our understanding
of global climate change? Surface temperature reconstructions have the ..."
7. An Introduction to Chemical Pharmacology: Pharmacodynamics in Relation to by Hugh McGuigan (1921)
"In a homologous series like the paraffin series, increase in CH2 does not
appreciably change surface tension. ..."