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  1. Dictionary
    dwindling
    /ˈdwɪndlɪŋ/

    adjective

    • 1. gradually diminishing in size, amount, or strength: "dwindling resources"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. gradually becoming smaller in size or amount, or fewer in number: She is one of a dwindling number of people who was alive in 1918. In Baltimore the city's dwindling population guarantees the loss of at least one state Senate seat. We are dealing with dwindling resources and aging buildings. See.

  3. to gradually become less, smaller, or lower in level: dwindle from sth to sth The municipality's population has dwindled from 40,000 to 24,000. dwindling funds / resources / stocks. Companies are having recruitment difficulties as they battle it out for a dwindling number of skilled staff.

  4. decrease, lessen, diminish, reduce, abate, dwindle mean to grow or make less. decrease suggests a progressive decline in size, amount, numbers, or intensity. slowly decreased the amount of pressure. lessen suggests a decline in amount rather than in number. has been unable to lessen her debt.

  5. growing less in size, intensity, or number until there is nothing or almost nothing left; diminishing or shrinking gradually. a dwindling number of passengers. the country's dwindling population. a dwindling workforce. their dwindling supplies of food.

  6. As a noun, dwindling means a state of becoming less, like the dwindling of your bank account after you quit your job. Use it as an adjective whenever something is growing smaller or sparser, like the dwindling leaves on the oak tree in autumn or the dwindling hair on your dad's head.

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

  8. Noun. 1. dwindling - a becoming gradually less; "there is no greater sadness that the dwindling away of a family". dwindling away. decrease, lessening, drop-off - a change downward; "there was a decrease in his temperature as the fever subsided"; "there was a sharp drop-off in sales".

  9. Definition of 'dwindle' Word Frequency. dwindle. (dwɪndəl ) Word forms: 3rd person singular present tense dwindles , present participle dwindling , past tense, past participle dwindled. 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]

  10. 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. That might help you remember the meaning, which is to shrink away gradually, like the Cheshire Cat in "Alice in Wonderland," who dwindles away until nothing is ...

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