change 
    Audio Help   [cheynj] Pronunciation Key - Show IPA Pronunciation verb,changed, chang·ing, noun
    Audio Help   [cheynj] Pronunciation Key - Show IPA Pronunciation verb,changed, chang·ing, noun–verb (used with object)
–verb (used without object)
–noun
| 1. | to make the form, nature, content, future course, etc., of (something) different from what it is or from what it would be if left alone: to change one's name; to change one's opinion; to change the course of history. | 
| 2. | to transform or convert (usually fol. by into): The witch changed the prince into a toad. | 
| 3. | to substitute another or others for; exchange for something else, usually of the same kind: She changed her shoes when she got home from the office. | 
| 4. | to give and take reciprocally; interchange: to change places with someone. | 
| 5. | to transfer from one (conveyance) to another: You'll have to change planes in Chicago. | 
| 6. | to give or get smaller money in exchange for: to change a five-dollar bill. | 
| 7. | to give or get foreign money in exchange for: to change dollars into francs. | 
| 8. | to remove and replace the covering or coverings of: to change a bed; to change a baby. | 
| 9. | to become different: Overnight the nation's mood changed. | 
| 10. | to become altered or modified: Colors change if they are exposed to the sun. | 
| 11. | to become transformed or converted (usually fol. by into): The toad changed into a prince again. | 
| 12. | to pass gradually into (usually fol. by to or into): Summer changed to autumn. | 
| 13. | to make a change or an exchange: If you want to sit next to the window, I'll change with you. | 
| 14. | to transfer between trains or other conveyances: We can take the local and change to an express at the next stop. | 
| 15. | to change one's clothes: She changed into jeans. | 
| 16. | (of the moon) to pass from one phase to another. | 
| 17. | (of the voice) to become deeper in tone; come to have a lower register:The boy's voice began to change when he was thirteen. | 
| 18. | the act or fact of changing; fact of being changed. | 
| 19. | a transformation or modification; alteration: They noticed the change in his facial expression. | 
| 20. | a variation or deviation: a change in the daily routine. | 
| 21. | the substitution of one thing for another: We finally made the change to an oil-burning furnace. | 
| 22. | variety or novelty: Let's try a new restaurant for a change. | 
| 23. | the passing from one place, state, form, or phase to another: a change of seasons; social change. | 
| 24. | Jazz. harmonic progression from one tonality to another; modulation. | 
| 25. | the supplanting of one thing by another. | 
| 26. | anything that is or may be substituted for another. | 
| 27. | a fresh set of clothing. | 
| 28. | money given in exchange for an equivalent of higher denomination. | 
| 29. | a balance of money that is returned when the sum tendered in payment is larger than the sum due. | 
| 30. | coins of low denomination. | 
| 31. | any of the various sequences in which a peal of bells may be rung. | 
| 32. | Also,'change. British. exchange (def. 10). | 
| 33. | Obsolete. changefulness; caprice. |