diminished

listen to the pronunciation of diminished
English - Turkish
{s} azaltılmış
küçültülmüş
azaltılan
{f} azal

Bir insanın haklarının tehdit edildiğinde, her insanın hakları azaltılır. - The rights of every man are diminished when the rights of one man are threatened.

Emekli olduktan sonra geliri yarı yarıya azaldı. - His income was diminished by half after retirement.

konik
azalt(mak)
{s} düşürülmüş
{f} azalt: adj.azaltılmış
{f} azal: adj.azaltılmış
azalt

Bir insanın haklarının tehdit edildiğinde, her insanın hakları azaltılır. - The rights of every man are diminished when the rights of one man are threatened.

Savaş ülkenin zenginliği azalttı. - The war diminished the wealth of the country.

diminish
azalmak

Bu ülkenin nüfusu giderek azalmaktadır. - The population of this country is gradually diminishing.

diminish
eksiltmek
diminished radix complement
eksiltilmiş köke tümler
diminished chord
azalmış akor
diminished radix complement
eksiltilmis köke tümler
diminished, reduced, decreased
Azalmış azalmış, azalmış
diminished libido
(Pisikoloji, Ruhbilim) cinsel işlev bozuklukları
diminished radix complement
taban-eksi-bir tamamlayıcı
diminished radix complement
ekşitilmiş köke tümler
diminish
{f} azaltmak
diminish
(Muzik) bir aralığı eksiltmek
diminish
gevşemek
diminish
önemini azaltmak
diminish
hafifletmek
diminish
tenakus etmek
diminish
fire vermek
diminish
sivriltmek
diminish
azal

Bu ülkenin nüfusu giderek azalmaktadır. - The population of this country is gradually diminishing.

Emekli olduktan sonra geliri yarı yarıya azaldı. - His income was diminished by half after retirement.

diminish
grow down

stalactites, which grow down from cave ceilings,are formed in limestone caves.

diminish
gittikçe azalarak
diminish
{f} azaltmak, eksiltmek, küçültmek; azalmak, eksilmek
diminish
{f} küçültmek
diminish
diminishing returns azalan verim
diminish
azal/azalt
diminish
diminishingly eksilerek
diminish
{f} kısmak
diminish
bir yarım entervali kısaltmak
diminish
alçaltmak
diminish
zayıflatmak
diminish
{f} inceltmek
English - English
lessened, reduced

The diminished Roman Empire never recovered from the sack of Rome.

reduced by a semitone
(of an organ or body part) diminished in size or strength as a result of disease or injury or lack of use; "partial paralysis resulted in an atrophied left arm"
A term which signifies that an interval - the difference in pitch between two notes - has been reduced by a semitone In practice, this term is generally only used to describe a diminished fifth or dimished seventh
Lowered, or reduced The term for an interval which has been decreased from the major by two half steps and from the perfect by one half step, e g c-a, diminished sixth, or c-g, a diminished fifth Also used for a triad which has a minor third and a diminished fifth, e g c, c-e, g Or in other words the lowering of a pitch chromatically by one half step
the term used to describe the reduction of an interval, for example C to G is a diminished fifth, this is the opposite to augmented
(of musical intervals) reduction by a semitone of any perfect or minor musical interval; "a diminished fifth"
{s} lessened, reduced, decreased, made smaller
impaired by diminution
The term for an interval which has been decreased from the major by two half steps and from the perfect by one half step, e g c-a, diminished sixth, or c-g, a diminished fifth Also used for a triad which has a minor third and a diminished fifth, e g c, c-e, g
made to seem smaller or less (especially in worth); "her comments made me feel small"
Lowered, or reduced Generally refers to the lowering of a pitch chromatically by one half step
An interval whose pitch has been lowered by a semitone
diminished fifth
A type of tritone in musical composition comprising of six semitones. It spans five diatonic scale degrees like a perfect fifth but narrower by a semitone. The number of diatonic degrees it spans is what distinguishes it from an augmented fourth

e.g. C - G is a perfect fifth, C - G♭ is a diminished fifth, and C - G# is an augmented fifth.

diminished fourth
A musical interval of the Western twelve-semitone system consisting of four semitones and spanning four degrees of the diatonic scale. It is one semitone narrower than a perfect fourth and enharmonically equivalent to a major third
diminished octave
A musical interval of the Western twelve-semitone system consisting of eleven semitones and spanning eight degrees of the diatonic scale. It is one semitone narrower than a perfect octave and enharmonically equivalent to a major seventh
diminished octaves
plural form of diminished octave
diminished radix complement
The number which, added to the given n-digit number in radix r, results in r^n - 1. In binary (r=2), this is the ones' complement; in decimal (r=10), this is the nines' complement

The diminished radix complement of 0423102_5 is 4021342_5.

diminished seventh
A musical interval of the Western twelve-semitone system consisting of nine semitones and spanning seven degrees of the diatonic scale. It is one semitone narrower than a minor seventh and enharmonically equivalent to a major sixth
diminished sevenths
plural form of diminished seventh
diminished scale
(Muzik) The diminished scale is a musical scale the pitches of which ascend in alternating whole tones and semitones. It is called the diminished scale because it can be conceived as a combination of two interlocking diminished seventh chords, just as the augmented scale can be conceived as a combination of two interlocking augmented triads. In classical theory, in contradistinction to jazz theory, it is more commonly called the octatonic scale, although there are forty-two other non-enharmonically equivalent, non-transpositionally equivalent eight-tone sets possible. The term ("octatonic pitch collection") was introduced by Arthur Berger in 1963 (van den Toorn 1983)
diminished responsibility
In law, diminished responsibility is a defence which states that someone is not mentally well enough to be totally responsible for their crime. di.minished ca'pacity when someone is not considered to be responsible for their actions because they are mentally ill. or diminished capacity In law, doctrine that absolves an accused person of part of the liability for his criminal act if he suffers from such abnormality of mind as to substantially impair his responsibility in committing or being a party to an alleged violation. The doctrine provides a mitigating defense in cases in which the mental disease or defect is not of such magnitude as to exclude criminal responsibility altogether. Diminished responsibility is most frequently asserted as a defense to murder charges that require proof of a particular mental state (e.g., premeditation). If diminished responsibility is shown, negating an element of the crime with which a defendant is charged, the defendant can be convicted only of a lesser offense that does not include the element. Although diminished responsibility is recognized as a defense in Britain, most other countries recognize only mental disease or abnormality of sufficient degree to sustain a defense of insanity
diminished responsibility
limited responsibility, partial legal liability, legal liability with stipulations
diminish
To disappear gradually
diminish
To become smaller
diminish
To taper
diminish
decrease in size, extent, or range; "The amount of homework decreased towards the end of the semester"; "The cabin pressure fell dramatically"; "her weight fall to under a hundred pounds"; "his voice fell to a whisper"
diminish
{v} to lessen, decrease, decay, degrade
being diminished
being lessened, being decreased, being contracted, declining, dwindling; being disparaged, being belittled
diminish
lessen the authority, dignity, or reputation of; "don't belittle your colleagues" To render dim, obscure, or dark; to make less bright or distinct; to take away the luster of; to darken; to dull; to obscure; to eclipse
diminish
To lessen the authority or dignity of; to put down; to degrade; to abase; to weaken
diminish
To render dim, obscure, or dark; to make less bright or distinct; to take away the luster of; to darken; to dull; to obscure; to eclipse
diminish
{f} make smaller, reduce; become smaller
diminish
To reduce a perfect or minor interval by a semitone
diminish
A bower; a dingle
diminish
To make smaller by a half step; to make (an interval) less than minor; as, a diminished seventh
diminish
Measure in a single line, as length, breadth, height, thickness, or circumference; extension; measurement; us
diminish
If you diminish someone or something, you talk about them or treat them in a way that makes them appear less important than they really are. He never put her down or diminished her
diminish
When something diminishes, or when something diminishes it, it becomes reduced in size, importance, or intensity. The threat of nuclear war has diminished Federalism is intended to diminish the power of the central state Universities are facing grave problems because of diminishing resources This could mean diminished public support for the war. increase
diminish
To make smaller
diminish
lessen the authority, dignity, or reputation of; "don't belittle your colleagues"
diminish
To make smaller in any manner; to reduce in bulk or amount; to lessen; opposed to augment or increase
diminish
To deprive of distinct vision; to hinder from seeing clearly, either by dazzling or clouding the eyes; to darken thesenses or understanding of
diminish
To become or appear less or smaller; to lessen; as, the apparent size of an object diminishes as we recede from it
diminish
A silver coin of the United States, of the value of ten cents; the tenth of a dollar
diminish
To grow dim
diminish
To take away; to subtract
diminished

    Hyphenation

    di·min·ished

    Turkish pronunciation

    dîmînîşt

    Pronunciation

    /dəˈmənəsʜt/ /dɪˈmɪnɪʃt/
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