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contort
[kuhn-tawrt]
verb (used with object)
to twist, bend, or draw out of shape; distort.
verb (used without object)
to become twisted, distorted, or strained.
His face contorted into a grotesque sneer.
contort
/ kənˈtɔːt /
verb
to twist or bend severely out of place or shape, esp in a strained manner
Other Word Forms
- contortive adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of contort1
Example Sentences
Performing under the name Mary Caryl, Serritella contorts her body into positions called “The Chopstick,” “The Jade Split” and “The Black Sun Split,” whirling around a silver pole as disco music plays.
But it’s also how she presents in the world of modeling, hooked up to wires, contorting her body to emulate a snake and sprawled across a hospital bed.
With the limited time frame, participating theater crews have to quickly establish a place and a sense of purpose, lending the audience, which must immediately contort to their role as actors, a call to action.
An actor differs: “One contorts oneself thousands of times, but dies only once … It’s simply not worth it.”
He has the preternatural ability to contort his facial expressions ever so slightly, going from innocent to cold and malevolent and back again in a split second.
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