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Definition of dwindle verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

dwindle

verb
 
/ˈdwɪndl/
 
/ˈdwɪndl/
[intransitive]
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they dwindle
 
/ˈdwɪndl/
 
/ˈdwɪndl/
he / she / it dwindles
 
/ˈdwɪndlz/
 
/ˈdwɪndlz/
past simple dwindled
 
/ˈdwɪndld/
 
/ˈdwɪndld/
past participle dwindled
 
/ˈdwɪndld/
 
/ˈdwɪndld/
-ing form dwindling
 
/ˈdwɪndlɪŋ/
 
/ˈdwɪndlɪŋ/
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  1. to become gradually less or smaller
    • dwindling audiences
    • a dwindling band of supporters
    • dwindle (away) (to something) Support for the party has dwindled away to nothing.
    • dwindle (from something) (to something) Membership of the club has dwindled from 70 to 20.
    Extra Examples
    • Supplies of coal are dwindling fast.
    • The group's support dwindled into insignificance.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • fast
    • quickly
    • rapidly
    preposition
    • into
    • to
    See full entry
    Word Originlate 16th cent.: frequentative of Scots and dialect dwine ‘fade away’, from Old English dwīnan, of Germanic origin; related to Middle Dutch dwīnen and Old Norse dvína.
See dwindle in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
hide-and-seek
noun
 
 
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