The history of the word distend stretches back to the Latin verb tendere—a root whose kin have really expanded the English language. To find evidence of this expansion, look to words that include "tend" or "tent"; many have tendere, which means "to stretch, extend, or spread," in their family tree. Perhaps the simplest example is tent, which names a shelter made from a piece of material stretched over a frame. You'll also find the influence of tendere in extend, tendon, contend, portend, and tendency.
expand may apply regardless of the manner of increase (such as growth, unfolding, addition of parts).
a business that expands every year
amplify implies the extension or enlargement of something inadequate.
amplify the statement with details
swell implies gradual expansion beyond a thing's original or normal limits.
the bureaucracy swelled to unmanageable proportions
distend implies outward extension caused by pressure from within.
a distended abdomen
inflate implies expanding by introduction of air or something insubstantial and suggests a vulnerability to sudden collapse.
an inflated ego
dilate applies especially to expansion of circumference.
dilated pupils
Example Sentences
an abdomen distended by disease
Recent Examples on the WebBlebs signal cell suicide; when stressed cells start chopping up their own proteins, their membranes distend. Laura Mallonee, Wired, 19 May 2020 In a bare living room, Huang struggled with a paper folder, his fingers distended like misshapen balloons.Washington Post, 29 Dec. 2019 In a bare living room, Huang struggled with a paper folder, his fingers distended like misshapen balloons.Anchorage Daily News, 30 Dec. 2019 And that power remains with opinion leaders who are, at this point, skilled hands at distending their own cultural anxieties into panics that—time and time and time again—smother history, fact, and common sense into irrelevance. Osita Nwanevu, The New Republic, 23 Sep. 2019 Water in her muscles will convert into vapor, which will collect under Lisa’s skin, distending areas of her body to twice their normal size. Caitlin Doughty, Popular Mechanics, 18 Sep. 2019 On one table lay the body of someone frozen statue-like in death, the stomach distended and a hand jutting stiffly outward. Sonia Perez D., chicagotribune.com, 8 June 2018 One person who saw the corpse of the officer, Major General Ali al-Qahtani, said his neck was twisted as if it had been broken, and that his body was badly bruised and distended.BostonGlobe.com, 12 Mar. 2018 Larger cells in a woman’s heart could interrupt its electrical pathways, the authors suspect, and extra pressure against the lungs (due to a woman’s large size) could cause the heart to distend. Amanda Macmillan, Time, 8 Sep. 2017 See More
Word History
Etymology
Middle English, from Latin distendere, from dis- + tendere to stretch — more at thin