Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    dwindle
    /ˈdwɪndl/

    verb

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. DWINDLE definition: 1. to become smaller in size or amount, or fewer in number: 2. to become smaller in size or…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of DWINDLE is to become steadily less : shrink. How to use dwindle in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Dwindle.

  4. verb. If something dwindles, it becomes smaller, weaker, or less in number. The factory's workforce has dwindled from over 4,000 to a few hundred. [VERB] Exports are dwindling and the trade deficit is swelling. [VERB] He is struggling to come to terms with his dwindling authority. [VERB -ing]

  5. DWINDLE meaning: 1. to become smaller in size or amount, or fewer in number: 2. to become smaller in size or…. Learn more.

  6. /ˈdwɪndəl/ IPA guide. Other forms: dwindled; dwindles. What do love, money, and the earth all have in common? All can dwindle, or shrink away, if we don't handle them properly. The word dwindle has a wonderfully descriptive, almost childlike sound to it, as though it belongs in a nursery rhyme.

  7. Dwindle definition: to become smaller and smaller; shrink; waste away. See examples of DWINDLE used in a sentence.

  8. 1. to become smaller and smaller; shrink; diminish. 2. to fall away, as in quality; degenerate. v.t. 3. to make smaller and smaller; cause to shrink. [1590–1600; dwine (now dial.) to waste away (Middle English; Old English dwīnan; c. Middle Dutch dwīnen, Old Norse dvīna) + -le] syn: See decrease.

  9. Definition of dwindle verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  10. Jun 3, 2024 · dwindle (third-person singular simple present dwindles, present participle dwindling, simple past and past participle dwindled) ( intransitive) To decrease, shrink, diminish, reduce in size or intensity. Synonyms: peter out, (figuratively) spin down, trail off.

  11. To keep on becoming or making smaller or less; diminish; shrink. Webster's New World. Similar definitions. To cause to dwindle. Difficulties that dwindled my enthusiasm for the recipe. American Heritage. (intransitive, figuratively) To fall away in quality; degenerate, sink. The flattery of his friends began to dwindle into simple approbation.