dwindling

listen to the pronunciation of dwindling
English - English
that is declining

There is dwindling support for New Labour.

Present participle of dwindle
a becoming gradually less; "there is no greater sadness that the dwindling away of a family"
gradually decreasing until little remains
{s} diminishing, decreasing, waning, fading
dwindling number
decreasing amount, diminishing quantity
dwindling participation
gradual reduction in the number of people involved
dwindling production
gradual decrease in production
dwindle
To decrease, shrink, diminish, reduce in size

very thing that was improving gradually degenerates and dwindles away to nothing,.

dwindle
to fall away in quality; degenerate, sink

The larger the empire, the more dwindles the mind of the citizen.

dwindle
to diminish or become less
dwindle
{v} to shrink, fall away, grow feeble
dwindle
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 He is struggling to come to terms with his dwindling authority. = shrink. dwindle away to gradually become less and less or smaller and smaller (dwine )
dwindle
{f} diminish, decrease, wane, fade, peter out
dwindle
become smaller or lose substance; "Her savings dwindled down"
dwindle
The process of dwindling; dwindlement; decline; degeneracy
dwindle
become smaller or lose substance; "Her savings dwindled down
dwindle
To make less; to bring low
dwindle
To diminish; to become less; to shrink; to waste or consume away; to become degenerate; to fall away
dwindle
To break; to disperse
dwindle
To decrease, shrink, vanish, or become less continuously but somewhat unsteadily or gradually
dwindling
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