dwindle
dwindle — 動詞
1. when something dwindles, it becomes less and less over time, so that only a smal
減少;縮減
隨著時間慢慢變少、變小
when something dwindles, it becomes less and less over time, so that only a small part remains at the end
The crowd outside the stadium dwindled as the rain grew heavier.
球場外的群眾隨著雨勢變大而逐漸減少。
intransitive: subject (crowd) + dwindled
Yumi's savings dwindled quickly after she lost her job at the factory.
Yumi 在工廠失業後,積蓄迅速減少。
collocation: savings dwindle
Over the years, the village school's enrollment dwindled to just twelve students.
多年下來,這所鄉村學校的學生人數減少到只剩下十二人。
Sven watched his hopes of winning the race dwindle with every passing mile.
Sven 每跑過一英里,就感覺自己贏得比賽的希望越來越渺茫。
Clean water in the refugee camp dwindled faster than aid workers had predicted.
難民營裡的乾淨用水減少的速度比援助人員預期的還要快。
- decrease
general and neutral; dwindle adds the idea of gradualness and approaching emptiness
- shrink
often about physical size; dwindle can also apply to abstract things like hopes or support
- diminish
more formal; dwindle sounds more natural in everyday speech
- wane
usually about strength, power, or popularity; dwindle is broader
文法句型
dwindle (away/down) — no object
用法筆記
Frequently used with an adverbial showing speed (e.g. "dwindled quickly", "dwindled steadily") or a final point ("dwindle to nothing", "dwindle to a handful"). Only the intransitive sense is standard — the verb cannot take a direct object.