Word Meanings - DIMINUTE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Small; diminished; diminutive. Jer. Taylor.
Related words: (words related to DIMINUTE)
- DIMINISH
To make smaller by a half step; to make less than minor; as, a diminished seventh. 4. To take away; to subtract. Neither shall ye diminish aught from it. Deut. iv. 2. Diminished column, one whose upper diameter is less than the lower. - SMALLISH
Somewhat small. G. W. Cable. - DIMINISHER
One who, or that which, diminishes anything. Clerke . - DIMINUTIVE
1. Below the average size; very small; little. 2. Expressing diminution; as, a diminutive word. 3. Tending to diminish. Diminutive of liberty. Shaftesbury. - SMALLCLOTHES
A man's garment for the hips and thighs; breeches. See Breeches. - SMALLPOX
A contagious, constitutional, febrile disease characterized by a peculiar eruption; variola. The cutaneous eruption is at first a collection of papules which become vesicles (first flat, subsequently umbilicated) and then pustules, and finally thick - DIMINISHABLE
Capable of being diminished or lessened. - TAYLOR-WHITE PROCESS
A process (invented about 1899 by Frederick W. Taylor and Maunsel B. White) for giving toughness to self-hardening steels. The steel is heated almost to fusion, cooled to a temperature of from 700º to 850º C. in molten lead, further cooled in - DIMINISHMENT
Diminution. Cheke. - SMALL
sm$l; akin to D. smal narrow, OS. & OHG. smal small, G. schmal narrow, Dan. & Sw. smal, Goth. smals small, Icel. smali smal cattle, sheep, or goats; cf. Gr. 1. Having little size, compared with other things of the same kind; little in quantity - DIMINUTIVENESS
The quality of being diminutive; smallness; littleness; minuteness. - SMALLAGE
A biennial umbelliferous plant native of the seacoats of Europe and Asia. When deprived of its acrid and even poisonous properties by cultivation, it becomes celery. - SMALLY
In a small quantity or degree; with minuteness. Ascham. - SMALLNESS
The quality or state of being small. - SMALLS
See 3 - SMALLSWORD
A light sword used for thrusting only; especially, the sword worn by civilians of rank in the eighteenth century. - DIMINUTIVELY
In a diminutive manner. - DIMINISHINGLY
In a manner to diminish. - REDIMINISH
To diminish again. - DISMALLY
In a dismal manner; gloomily; sorrowfully; uncomfortably. - ABYSMALLY
To a fathomless depth; profoundly. "Abysmally ignorant." G. Eliot. - INDIMINISHABLE
Incapable of being diminished. Milton.