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[ UK /twˈɪstɪd/ ]
[ US /ˈtwɪstɪd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. having an intended meaning altered or misrepresented
    a perverted translation of the poem
    many of the facts seemed twisted out of any semblance to reality

How To Use twisted In A Sentence

  • with his necktie twisted awry
  • But his police career ended in a welter of accusations that in order to obtain results, he hadn't just bent the rules, he'd twisted them out of shape.
  • This camp and sassy pop track comes complete with bitter and twisted lyrics and a hint of europop. The Sun
  • Around the humerus, loose where once it had clung tightly, lay the twisted semi-circle of a priestly arm-ring. MIDNIGHT IS A LONELY PLACE
  • By then though, it was too late and the story had been twisted so far out of recognition that the forced references to things like Namek, Oozaru, and Roshi's pervertedness just seemed out of place and stupid. Anime Nano!
  • A young twig is easier twisted than an old tree. 
  • The road itself twisted and contorted as much as the river as it dodged through and around clusters of trees and boulders: indigenous and erratics.
  • He peered down into her tearful face with a twisted smile, reaching up to brush some of her wildly cascading hair from her cheek. THE WOLF AND THE DOVE
  • When she returned she redressed her hair, drawing it back across her ears, put in at a provocative angle a fan-like carved shell comb, and twisted a shawl of flame-colored silk -- it was a manton, she instructed him -- about her shoulders. Cytherea
  • Toledo'sdistinctive twisted streets and covered passageways evoke thecity's golden years as part of the Arab Empire.
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