distend

Etymology
Borrowed from.

Verb

 * 1)  To extend or expand, as from internal pressure; to swell
 * 2)  To extend; to stretch out; to spread out.
 * 3) * 1662 Thomas Salusbury, Galileo's Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems (Dialogue 2):
 * I begin to hate the theater, the feeling wickedly distended by histrionics, all my old gestures, clutchings, tears, and applications. These impure and frail matters are conteined within the angust concave of the Lunar Orb, above which with uninterrupted Series the things Celestial distend themselves.
 * 1)  To cause to swell.
 * 2)  To cause gravidity.
 * 1)  To cause to swell.
 * 2)  To cause gravidity.
 * 1)  To cause gravidity.

Translations

 * Bulgarian: ,
 * Catalan:
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:
 * French:
 * Hungarian: ,
 * Maori: kōnakinaki, koeke
 * Polish: rozdymać się, rozdąć się
 * Swedish:


 * Bulgarian:
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: ,
 * Hungarian:
 * Maori: whakatetere, koeke
 * Polish: rozdymać, rozdąć, rozdąć
 * Swedish: