| alter | If something alters or if you alter it, it changes. Little had altered in the village They have never altered their programmes by a single day. = change | en |
| Alter | To change in any manner, without limiting this, includes and action that detracts from the heritage value or heritage character of heritage property | en |
| Alter | and ALTERATION are a change, addition or modification in construction or occupancy | en |
| Alter | -An abbreviated form of "alternate personality" or "alternate identity"; a part of the person that is separated by dissociation from the Core identity | en |
| Alter | To make different without changing into something else [Click Here to Return to List] | en |
| Alter | The medical/psychiatric term for a person inside the system It comes from a shortening of "Alternate Personality", which implies that those in a system are not real people, therefore this term is not popular among Empowered Multiples | en |
| Alter | to change | en |
| Alter | To change the pattern so that it corresponds to body measurements | en |
| Alter | change, as in: Nothing you can say will alter my plans | en |
| Alter | The action of setting the E-bit of a TLB entry to 0 and modifying some portion of the physical page number field Altered entries in the TLB are still visible to software through the insert TLB protection instructions | en |
| Alter | cause to change; make different; cause a transformation; "The advent of the automobile may have altered the growth pattern of the city"; "The discussion has changed my thinking about the issue" | en |
| Alter | Alternative Traffic in Towns Initiative | en |
| Alter | make an alteration to; "This dress needs to be altered" | en |
| Alter | make or become different in some particular way, without permanently losing one's or its former characteristics or essence; "her mood changes in accordance with the weather"; "The supermarket's selection of vegetables varies according to the season" | en |
| Alter | One personality within a system of personlities | en |
| Alter | insert words into texts, often falsifying it thereby | en |
| Alter | a change made to an image element, color, or page layout through computer manipulation | en |
| alter | To agitate; to affect mentally | en |
| alter | To make otherwise; to change in some respect, either partially or wholly; to vary; to modify | en |
| alter | To change the form or structure of | en |
| alter | To tailor clothes to make them fit | en |
| alter | To geld | en |
| alter | change, modify; be changed, be modified fiil | en |
| alter | To become, in some respects, different; to vary; to change; as, the weather alters almost daily; rocks or minerals alter by exposure | en |
| alter | remove the ovaries of; "Is your cat spayed?" make an alteration to; "This dress needs to be altered | en |
| alter | remove the ovaries of; "Is your cat spayed?" | en |
| alter | make an alteration to; "This dress needs to be altered | en |
| Altering | modifying | en |
| altered | past of alter | en |
| altered | with couded eyes and with an altered manner of breathing"-Charles Dickens having testicles or ovaries removed | en |
| altered | changed in form or character without becoming something else; "the altered policy promised success"; "following an altered course we soon found ourselves back in civilization"; "he looked | en |
| altering | present participle of alter | en |
| altering | the sterilization of an animal; "they took him to the vet for neutering" | en |
| alters | third-person singular of alter | en |