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    subside
    /səbˈsʌɪd/

    verb

    • 1. become less intense, violent, or severe: "I'll wait a few minutes until the storm subsides" Similar abatelet upmoderatecalmOpposite intensifyworsen
    • 2. (of water) go down to a lower or the normal level: "the floods subside almost as quickly as they arise" Similar recedeebbfall backflow backOpposite rise

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. SUBSIDE definition: 1. If a condition subsides, it becomes less strong or extreme: 2. If a building, land, or water…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of SUBSIDE is to sink or fall to the bottom : settle. How to use subside in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Subside.

  4. verb (used without object) , sub·sid·ed, sub·sid·ing. to sink to a low or lower level. Synonyms: settle, descend, decline. Antonyms: rise. to become quiet, less active, or less violent; abate: The laughter subsided. Synonyms: ebb, wane, lessen, diminish. Antonyms: increase.

  5. 1. to become less loud, excited, violent, etc; abate. 2. to sink or fall to a lower level. 3. (Physical Geography) (of the surface of the earth, etc) to cave in; collapse. 4. (of sediment, etc) to sink or descend to the bottom; settle. [C17: from Latin subsīdere to settle down, from sub- down + sīdere to settle] subˈsider n.

  6. To subside is to die down or become less violent, like rough ocean waves after a storm has passed (or your seasickness, if you happened to be sailing on that ocean). Subside comes from the Latin prefix sub- (meaning "down") and the Latin verb sidere (meaning "to settle").

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

  8. (səbsaɪd ) Word forms: 3rd person singular present tense subsides, present participle subsiding, past tense, past participle subsided. 1. intransitive verb. If a feeling or noise subsides, it becomes less strong or loud. The pain had subsided during the night. Synonyms: decrease, diminish, lessen, ease More Synonyms of subside. 2. intransitive verb

  9. Subside Definition. səb-sīd. subsided, subsides, subsiding. Meanings. Synonyms. Sentences. Definition Source. Origin. Verb. Filter. verb. subsided, subsides, subsiding. To become less active, intense, etc.; abate. Webster's New World. Similar definitions. To become smaller or less prominent, as swelling. American Heritage. To sink to a lower level.

  10. 1. If a feeling or noise subsides, it becomes less strong or loud. [...] 2. If fighting subsides, it becomes less intense or general. [...] 3. If the ground or a building is subsiding, it is very slowly sinking to a lower level. [...] More. Pronunciations of the word 'subside' British English: səbsaɪd American English: səbsaɪd. More.

  11. subside meaning, definition, what is subside: if a feeling, pain, sound etc subsides, ...: Learn more.