| diluent |
causing dilution; diluting. [2 definitions] |
| dilute |
to make (a solution) thinner or less concentrated by adding more solvent. [4 definitions] |
| dilution |
the act of diluting or state of being diluted. [2 definitions] |
| diluvial |
of or caused by a glacier or flood. |
| dim |
poorly lighted. [9 definitions] |
| dime |
a coin of the United States and Canada equaling ten cents. |
| dimenhydrinate |
a crystalline antihistamine used to control motion sickness and allergies. |
| dime novel |
a cheap paperback novel with much adventure or romance. |
| dimension |
size as measured in height, width, or depth. [4 definitions] |
| dimensionless |
combined form of dimension. |
| dime store |
a store that sells mostly inexpensive products; five-and-ten. |
| diminish |
to decrease or cause to appear decreased in size, prestige, or importance. [3 definitions] |
| diminishable |
combined form of diminish. |
| diminished |
of a musical interval or chord, lower by a semitone or half step. |
| diminishing returns |
a proposition in economics that when the amount of one factor of production, such as labor, is increased past a certain point while the amounts of other factors, such as land or capital, are held constant, additional output will increase only at a progressively lower and lower rate. |
| diminuendo |
gradually decreasing in loudness or force; decrescendo (used as a musical direction). [3 definitions] |
| diminution |
the act, process, or result of diminishing; decrease. |
| diminutive |
very small; tiny. [4 definitions] |
| dimity |
a sheer fabric, usu. of cotton, woven with a fine stripe or check of heavier thread. |
| dimmer |
a device for varying the brightness of an electric light; rheostat. [2 definitions] |
| dim-out |
the dimming or restricted use of light at night, as in a city or on a ship in order to be less visible to enemy aircraft. |