Need another word that means the same as “shorten”? Find 30 synonyms and 30 related words for “shorten” in this overview.
The synonyms of “Shorten” are: bowdlerise, bowdlerize, castrate, expurgate, abbreviate, abridge, contract, cut, foreshorten, reduce, make shorter, condense, precis, synopsize, compress, lessen, shrink, decrease, diminish, cut down, cut short, dock, trim, clip, crop, pare down, prune, get shorter, grow shorter, grow less
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “shorten” as a verb can have the following definitions:
abbreviate | Shorten the duration of; cut short. I decided to abbreviate my stay in Cambridge. |
abridge | Curtail (a right or privilege. Even the right to free speech can be abridged. |
bowdlerise | Edit by omitting or modifying parts considered indelicate. |
bowdlerize | Remove material that is considered improper or offensive from (a text or account), especially with the result that the text becomes weaker or less effective. Bowdlerize a novel. |
castrate | Remove the testicles of (a male animal or man). A restrictive classicism would have castrated England s literature. |
clip | Fasten or be fastened with a clip or clips. The panels simply clip on to the framework. |
compress | Squeeze or press (two things) together. Viola compressed her lips together grimly. |
condense | Change or cause to change from a gas or vapour to a liquid. Condense the milk. |
contract | Enter into a contractual arrangement. A buyer may contract for the right to withhold payment. |
crop | Yield crops. She cropped her long golden hair. |
cut | Cut off the testicles of male animals such as horses. Niall brought the car to a halt and cut the engine. |
cut down | Cut down on make a reduction in. |
cut short | Reduce in scope while retaining essential elements. |
decrease | Decrease in size extent or range. The aisles were decreased in height. |
diminish | Lessen the authority, dignity, or reputation of. The new law is expected to diminish the government s chances. |
dock | Maneuver into a dock. The yard where the boats were docked and maintained. |
expurgate | Remove matter thought to be objectionable or unsuitable from (a text or account. Editors heavily expurgated the novel before its initial publication. |
foreshorten | Reduce in scope while retaining essential elements. Leicestershire won by 133 runs in a foreshortened contest. |
get shorter | Cause to do; cause to act in a specified manner. |
grow less | Come into existence; take on form or shape. |
grow shorter | Become attached by or as if by the process of growth. |
lessen | Wear off or die down. The warmth of the afternoon lessened. |
make shorter | Give rise to; cause to happen or occur, not always intentionally. |
pare down | Cut small bits or pare shavings from. |
precis | Make a precis of a text or speech. |
prune | Cultivate, tend, and cut back the growth of. |
reduce | Reduce in size reduce physically. The sauce should reduce to one cup. |
shrink | Wither, as with a loss of moisture. I don t shrink from my responsibilities. |
synopsize | Give a brief summary or general survey of (something. Your r sum should synopsize your experience. |
trim | Adjust the balance of a ship or aircraft by rearranging its cargo or by means of its trim tabs. He trimmed down from twenty two stone to a mere eighteen. |
abate | Reduce or remove (a nuisance. Nothing abated his crusading zeal. |
abbreviate | Shorten. I decided to abbreviate my stay in Cambridge. |
abridge | Shorten (a piece of writing) without losing the sense. The introduction is abridged from the author s afterword to the novel. |
atrophy | Undergo atrophy. Muscles that are not used will atrophy. |
bowdlerize | Remove material that is considered improper or offensive from (a text or account), especially with the result that the text becomes weaker or less effective. Every edition of his letters and diaries has been bowdlerized. |
curtail | Place restrictions on. Civil liberties were further curtailed. |
decrease | The amount by which something decreases. The aisles were decreased in height. |
decrement | Cause a discrete reduction in (a numerical quantity. Relaxation produces a decrement in sympathetic nervous activity. |
depletion | Reduction in the number or quantity of something. The depletion of the ozone layer. |
dilute | (of colour or light) weak or low in concentration. The reforms have been diluted. |
diminish | Cause to seem less impressive or valuable. The trial has aged and diminished him. |
downgrade | An instance of reducing someone or something’s rank, status, or level of importance. A steep downgrade for which he had to put the car in second. |
dwindle | Become smaller or lose substance. Her savings dwindled down. |
encapsulate | Enclose (an organ or structure of the body) in a tough sheath or membrane. Pancreatic tumours are encapsulated in a densely packed thicket of proteins and cells. |
excise | Charge excise on goods. The rate of excise duty on spirits. |
expurgate | Edit by omitting or modifying parts considered indelicate. Editors heavily expurgated the novel before its initial publication. |
extenuate | Lessen or to try to lessen the seriousness or extent of. Drawings of extenuated figures. |
flinch | An act of flinching. She flinched when they showed the slaughtering of the calf. |
haircut | An act of cutting a person’s hair. Hair salons offering discounted haircuts. |
palliate | Lessen or to try to lessen the seriousness or extent of. There is no way to excuse or palliate his dirty deed. |
reduce | Reduce in size reduce physically. Reduce an image. |
retrench | Reduce (something) in extent or quantity. Right wing parties which seek to retrench the welfare state. |
rundown | (of a company or industry) in a poor economic state. A rundown in the business would be a devastating blow to the local economy. |
shrink | Be averse to or unwilling to do (something difficult or unappealing. You should see a shrink. |
shrinkage | An allowance made for reduction in the takings of a business due to wastage or theft. The material lost 2 inches per yard in shrinkage. |
shrinking | Becoming smaller in size or amount. The shrinking market has provoked a massive price war. |
shrivel | Decrease in size, range, or extent. My courage shrivelled when I saw the task before me. |
understate | Describe or represent (something) as being smaller or less good or important than it really is. The press have understated the extent of the problem. |
weaken | Destroy property or hinder normal operations. The fever weakened his body. |
wince | Make a face indicating disgust or dislike. She winced when she heard his pompous speech. |
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