Need another word that means the same as “weaken”? Find 58 synonyms and 30 related words for “weaken” in this overview.
The synonyms of “Weaken” are: break, damp, dampen, soften, de-escalate, step down, counteract, countermine, sabotage, subvert, undermine, enfeeble, debilitate, incapacitate, sap one's strength, enervate, tire, exhaust, wear out, reduce, decrease, diminish, lessen, moderate, temper, sap, dilute, water down, thin, blunt, mitigate, deplete, soften up, abate, dwindle, ease up, let up, trail off, wane, ebb, subside, peter out, melt away, fizzle out, taper off, tail off, grow dim, grow faint, impair, compromise, relent, give in, acquiesce, yield, give way, accede, succumb, come round
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “weaken” as a verb can have the following definitions:
abate | Become less in amount or intensity. Nothing abated his crusading zeal. |
accede | Yield to another’s wish or opinion. By now John had died and Henry III had acceded. |
acquiesce | Accept something reluctantly but without protest. Sara acquiesced in his decision. |
blunt | Make dull or blunt. Blunt the knives. |
break | Become fractured break or crack on the surface only. Dawn was just breaking. |
come round | Cover a certain distance. |
compromise | Make a compromise arrive at a compromise. Last month s leak of source code will not compromise your IT security. |
counteract | Oppose or check by a counteraction. Should we deliberately intervene in the climate system to counteract global warming. |
countermine | Dig a countermine against. They countermined the enemies mines so that sometimes they fought hand to hand underground. |
damp | Lessen in force or effect. Concrete structures damp out any vibrations. |
dampen | Lessen in force or effect. Nothing could dampen her enthusiasm. |
de-escalate | Reduce the level or intensity or size or scope of. |
debilitate | Make weak. He was severely debilitated by a stomach upset. |
decrease | Decrease in size extent or range. He decreased his staff. |
deplete | Diminish in number or quantity. Reservoirs have been depleted by years of drought. |
dilute | Reduce the value of (a shareholding) by issuing more shares in a company without increasing the values of its assets. Bleach can be diluted with cold water. |
diminish | Make or become less. The pain will gradually diminish. |
dwindle | Become smaller or lose substance. Her savings dwindled down. |
ease up | Lessen pain or discomfort; alleviate. |
ebb | Hem in fish with stakes and nets so as to prevent them from going back into the sea with the ebb. The tide began to ebb. |
enervate | Disturb the composure of. The heat enervated us all. |
enfeeble | Make weak. Sickness had enfeebled me. |
exhaust | Make (someone) feel very tired. Her day out had exhausted her. |
fizzle out | To state openly and publicly one’s homosexuality. |
give in | Consent to engage in sexual intercourse with a man. |
give way | Afford access to. |
grow dim | Develop and reach maturity; undergo maturation. |
grow faint | Grow emotionally or mature. |
impair | Weaken or damage (something, especially a faculty or function. A noisy job could permanently impair their hearing. |
incapacitate | Injure permanently. He was incapacitated by a heart attack. |
lessen | Wear off or die down. The warmth of the afternoon lessened. |
let up | Cause to move; cause to be in a certain position or condition. |
melt away | Become more relaxed, easygoing, or genial. |
mitigate | Lessen or to try to lessen the seriousness or extent of. There had been a provocation that mitigated the offence to a degree. |
moderate | Lessen the intensity of; temper; hold in restraint; hold or keep within limits. The weather has moderated considerably. |
peter out | To state openly and publicly one’s homosexuality. |
reduce | Reduce in size reduce physically. Reduce an image. |
relent | Give in, as to influence or pressure. She was going to refuse his request but relented. |
sabotage | Destroy property or hinder normal operations. Power lines from South Africa were sabotaged by rebel forces. |
sap | Deplete. Her illness had sapped her of energy and life. |
sap one's strength | Deplete. |
soften | Make (images or sounds) soft or softer. Soften a shock. |
soften up | Make less severe or harsh. |
step down | Cause (a computer) to execute a single command. |
subside | Wear off or die down. The valleys subside. |
subvert | Destroy completely. Subvert the ruling class. |
succumb | Die from the effect of a disease or injury. After a few blows there the porcupine succumbs. |
tail off | Remove or shorten the tail of an animal. |
taper off | Diminish gradually. |
temper | Make more temperate acceptable or suitable by adding something else. The way a smith would temper a sword. |
thin | Make thin or thinner. The trees began to thin out. |
tire | Exhaust or get tired through overuse or great strain or stress. The proof of a great story is that people never tire of retelling it. |
trail off | Move, proceed, or walk draggingly or slowly. |
undermine | Hollow out as if making a cave or opening. The flow of water had undermined pillars supporting the roof. |
wane | (of a state or feeling) decrease in vigour or extent; become weaker. Interest in the project waned. |
water down | Secrete or form water, as tears or saliva. |
wear out | Be dressed in. |
yield | Produce or provide (a natural, agricultural, or industrial product. The land yields grapes and tobacco. |
adulterate | Corrupt, debase, or make impure by adding a foreign or inferior substance; often by replacing valuable ingredients with inferior ones. Adulterate remedies. |
attenuate | Reduce the force, effect, or value of. The first live vaccine was insufficiently attenuated and produced a significant disease. |
dampen | Reduce the amplitude of (a sound source. The fine rain dampened her face. |
deaden | Make (someone) insensitive to something. Diabetes can deaden the nerve endings. |
debilitate | Hinder, delay, or weaken. Hard drugs destroy families and debilitate communities. |
decline | A condition inferior to an earlier condition; a gradual falling off from a better state. This Evening from the Sun s decline arriv d. |
dilute | Lessen the strength or flavor of a solution or mixture. Diluted alcohol. |
diminish | Make or become less. The pain will gradually diminish. |
diminished | Diminished in size or strength as a result of disease or injury or lack of use. A diminished role for local government. |
emasculate | Deprive of strength or vigor. In his mind her success emasculated him. |
enervate | Make (someone) feel drained of energy or vitality. The heat enervated us all. |
enfeeble | Make weak or feeble. The breakdown in law and order enfeebled the government s authority. |
fading | Weakening in force or intensity. |
fatigued | Drained of energy or effectiveness; extremely tired; completely exhausted. |
flagging | Flagstones collectively. She wants to revive her flagging career. |
hydrolyze | Undergo hydrolysis; decompose by reacting with water. |
impotent | Unable to take effective action; helpless or powerless. Felt impotent rage. |
languid | (of a period of time) relaxed and peaceful. A languid wave of the hand. |
languish | Fail to make progress or be successful. She still languished after Richard. |
lessen | Wear off or die down. The years have lessened the gap in age between us. |
rarefy | Lessen the density or solidity of. As the shell continues to expand and rarefy astronomers may eventually be able to see characteristic gamma rays from the radioactivity within. |
reduce | Reduce in scope while retaining essential elements. She reduced her niece to a servant. |
reduced | Well below normal (especially in price. |
sabotage | Destroy property or hinder normal operations. A coordinated campaign of sabotage. |
slowly | Without speed slow is sometimes used informally for slowly. He spoke slowly. |
thinner | A diluting agent. Dampen a clean rag with thinners and carefully wipe any remaining dust from the timber. |
undermine | Lessen the effectiveness, power, or ability of, especially gradually or insidiously. The flow of water had undermined pillars supporting the roof. |
unsettle | Disturb the composure of. The crisis has unsettled financial markets. |
wane | Grow smaller. Interest in his novels waned. |
wither | Wither as with a loss of moisture. It is not true that old myths either die or wither away. |
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