Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    attrition
    /əˈtrɪʃn/

    noun

    • 1. the process of reducing something's strength or effectiveness through sustained attack or pressure: "the council is trying to wear down the opposition by attrition" Similar wearing downwearing awayweakeningdebilitation
    • 2. (in scholastic theology) sorrow for sin, falling short of contrition.

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. ATTRITION definition: 1. gradually making something weaker and destroying it, especially the strength or confidence of an…. Learn more.

  3. Attrition definition: a reduction or decrease in numbers, size, or strength. See examples of ATTRITION used in a sentence.

  4. The meaning of ATTRITION is sorrow for one's sins that arises from a motive other than that of the love of God. How to use attrition in a sentence. Word History of Attrition

  5. Aug 18, 2023 · The term attrition refers to a gradual but deliberate reduction in staff numbers that occurs as employees leave a company and are not replaced. It is commonly...

  6. Attrition is a gradual process of wearing down, weakening, or destroying something. When a company wants to reduce its payroll without firing anyone, it will sometimes do so through attrition; that is, by waiting for people to retire or quit without hiring anyone new to replace them.

  7. ATTRITION meaning: 1. gradually making something weaker and destroying it, especially the strength or confidence of an…. Learn more.

  8. Attrition is a process in which you steadily reduce the strength of an enemy by continually attacking them.

  9. 1. A rubbing away or wearing down by friction. 2. a. A gradual reduction in number or strength because of stress or military action. b. A gradual reduction in personnel or membership because of resignation, retirement, or death, often viewed in contrast to reduction from layoffs. 3.

  10. The act or process of wearing away or grinding down by friction. Webster's New World. A gradual reduction in number or strength because of stress or military action. American Heritage. Any gradual wearing or weakening, esp. to the point of exhaustion. A siege is a battle of attrition. Webster's New World.

  11. 1 a process of making someone or something, especially your enemy, weaker by repeatedly attacking them or creating problems for them It was a war of attrition. These were the economics not of efficiency but of attrition.

  1. People also search for