Thesaurus / dwindle
FEEDBACKHow to use dwindle in a sentence
Google, though, seems to be gaining more control over the auction as transparency and data have dwindled down over the years.
GOOGLE MIGHT HAVE TO SUBSIDIZE JOURNALISM, BUT NOT LIKE THIS…GEORGE NGUYENFEBRUARY 10, 2021SEARCH ENGINE LANDI imagine them bumping around, lost without crowded indoor spaces to breed in, thwarted by vaccine-boosted immune cells, unable to find a host, dwindling, going, gone.
WHY OPENING RESTAURANTS IS EXACTLY WHAT THE CORONAVIRUS WANTS US TO DOCAROLINE CHENFEBRUARY 6, 2021PROPUBLICAThat’s enough for the snowpack to be dwindling in most spots.
PM UPDATE: COLD TONIGHT UNDER CLEARER SKIES, THEN IT TURNS MILDER THURSDAYIAN LIVINGSTONFEBRUARY 3, 2021WASHINGTON POSTAt some point, they might consider whether the search for a dwindling electorate is all that helpful for their survival.
SHRINKING THE GOP, ONE STATE AT A TIMEJENNIFER RUBINFEBRUARY 2, 2021WASHINGTON POSTConsumers are increasingly purchasing digital versions of games on platforms such as Xbox Live and the PlayStation Store, leaving GameStop with both a dwindling supply and dampened demand for used video games.
DESPITE RECORD STOCK SURGE, GAMESTOP IS STILL STRUGGLING TO STAY AFLOATABHA BHATTARAI, TAYLOR TELFORDFEBRUARY 1, 2021WASHINGTON POSTToward the end of the night as the doses dwindled, one healthcare worker at UW Northwest said that she saw younger folks in line give up their spots to those who were older.
I JUMPED THE QUEUE TO GET AN EXPIRING VACCINE. DID I DO THE RIGHT THING?NIALL FIRTHFEBRUARY 1, 2021MIT TECHNOLOGY REVIEWWith his path to a civilian political role dwindling, he faced “going from the most powerful man in the country to a retiree,” said Mathieson.
IN MYANMAR COUP, SUU KYI’S OUSTER HERALDS RETURN TO MILITARY RULESHIBANI MAHTANI, TIMOTHY MCLAUGHLINFEBRUARY 1, 2021WASHINGTON POSTOne other troubling offshoot from climate change is increasing conflict, and sometimes outright terrorism, as communities battle over dwindling resources, in particular water, but also over land rights.
A KENYAN INSURTECH STARTUP FOR DE-RISKING FARMERS IS EXPANDING TO ASIA WITH NEW FUNDINGSOCRATES MBAMALUJANUARY 29, 2021QUARTZThe species is dwindling, with the latest estimates falling below 400.
A VIRTUAL MENAGERIE: HOW CONSERVATION AND RESCUE EFFORTS CAN CONNECT US WITH WILDLIFE AROUND THE WORLDANDREA SACHSJANUARY 15, 2021WASHINGTON POSTConfidence in the government has dwindled, and been compounded by top officials — including Lofven himself — flouting their own rules.
AS DEATHS SURGE, SWEDEN REVERSES ITS LIGHT TOUCH APPROACH TO CONTAIN RISING INFECTIONSKATHERINE DUNNJANUARY 13, 2021FORTUNEWORDS RELATED TO DWINDLE
- abate
- calm down
- check
- contract
- crumble
- curb
- curtail
- cut down
- decay
- decline
- degenerate
- depreciate
- deteriorate
- devaluate
- die down
- diminish
- drain
- droop
- drop
- drop off
- dry up
- dwindle
- ease
- ebb
- evaporate
- fade
- fall off
- lessen
- let up
- lighten
- lose edge
- lower
- modify
- narrow down
- peter out
- quell
- quiet
- rebate
- reduce
- restrain
- run low
- settle
- shrink
- shrivel
- sink
- slack off
- slacken
- slash
- slow down
- slump
- soften
- subside
- tail away
- tail off
- taper
- wane
- waste
- weaken
- wear away
- wear down
- wither
- abate
- abridge
- bankrupt
- bant
- break
- cheapen
- chop
- clip
- contract
- curtail
- cut
- cut back
- cut down
- debase
- deflate
- depreciate
- depress
- diet
- dilute
- diminish
- discount
- drain
- dwindle
- go on a diet
- impair
- impoverish
- knock off
- lessen
- lose weight
- lower
- mark down
- moderate
- nutshell
- pare
- pauperize
- rebate
- recede
- roll back
- ruin
- scale down
- shave
- shorten
- slash
- slim
- slow down
- step down
- take off weight
- taper
- taper off
- tone down
- trim
- truncate
- turn down
- weaken
- wind down
- abate
- absolve
- alleviate
- amnesty
- cancel
- condone
- decrease
- defer
- delay
- desist
- diminish
- dwindle
- ease up
- excuse
- exonerate
- fall away
- forbear
- forgive
- halt
- hold off
- hold up
- intermit
- mitigate
- moderate
- modify
- modulate
- pardon
- prorogue
- put off
- reduce
- relax
- release
- repeal
- reprieve
- rescind
- respite
- shelve
- sink
- slack
- slacken
- soften
- stay
- suspend
- wane
- weaken
- abated
- absolved
- alleviated
- amnestied
- canceled
- condoned
- decreased
- deferred
- delayed
- desisted
- diminished
- dwindled
- eased up
- excused
- exonerated
- fell away
- forbore
- forgave
- halted
- held off
- held up
- intermited
- mitigated
- moderated
- modified
- modulated
- pardoned
- prorogued
- put off
- reduced
- relaxed
- released
- repealed
- reprieved
- rescinded
- respited
- sank
- shelved
- slacked
- slackened
- softened
- stayed
- suspended
- waned
- weakened
- bore
- brought down
- capsized
- cast down
- caved in
- couched
- declined
- demitted
- depressed
- descended
- dipped
- disappeared
- drilled
- drooped
- dropped
- drove
- drowned
- dug
- ebbed
- engulfed
- excavated
- fell
- floundered
- forced down
- foundered
- immersed
- lay
- let down
- lowered
- overturned
- overwhelmed
- plummeted
- plunged
- put down
- rammed
- ran
- regressed
- sagged
- scuttled
- set
- settled
- shipwrecked
- sloped
- slumped
- stabbed
- stooped
- stuck
- submerged
- subsided
- swamped
- thrust
- tip over
- touch bottom
- went down
- went to the bottom
- wrecked
Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.