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Looking for synonyms for "lower"? Browse alternatives ranked by relevance — sharper word choices for fiction, poetry, and copywriting.
(adj)
Lower; under.
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(archaic) Lesser; smaller.
(v)
(transitive) To make (a ruler or government) lose their position of power.
To remove something from a website.
(intransitive) To relax and enjoy oneself completely; be uninhibited in one's enjoyment.
(transitive, idiomatic) To disappoint; to betray or fail somebody.
Low in rank or social importance.
(idiomatic) To refuse, decline, or deny.
(with to) Lower in rank, status, or quality.
(often derogatory) Having little or no importance.
To make depressed, sad or bored.
(intransitive) To frown; to look sullen.
(not comparable, often preceded by a possessive adjective or a possessive form of a noun) Younger.
(intransitive) To look or stare with anger.
(n)
A wrinkling of the forehead with the eyebrows brought together, typically indicating displeasure, severity, or concentration.
Placed in a lower class, rank, or position.
Next in order to the first or primary; of second place in origin, rank, etc.
Dwelling within the underworld.
Of or relating to hell, or the world of the dead; hellish.
Pertaining to the underworld; being beneath the earth.
inferior in rank or status
the lower of two berths
The lowest part of anything.
(intransitive) To become smaller; to contract.
(adv)
Towards a lower place; towards what is below.
shrinking
Facing downwards.
The act of declining or refusing something.
decline
becoming smaller
(intransitive) Of a quantity, to become smaller.
Having a small width; not wide; having opposite edges or sides that are close, especially by comparison to length or depth.
Senses relating to moving from a higher to a lower position.
(uncountable) The subtraction itself; decrease.
(N)
a real-time card game from James Ernest in which all players are falling from the sky for no apparent reason.
(transitive) To make smaller.
(heading, intransitive) To be moved downwards.
(transitive) To make (something) smaller or as small as possible; shrink; reduce.
One who, or that which, narrows.
Made smaller or less; having undergone reduction.
(transitive) To shorten or abridge the duration of; to bring an end to; to truncate.
(transitive) To make shorter; to abbreviate.
(transitive) To bring down the size, quantity, quality, value or intensity of something; to diminish, to lower.
A growing lesser; reduction or decrease.
(transitive) To make less; to diminish; to reduce.
(ambitransitive) To decrease in intensity or magnitude.
(intransitive) To gradually decrease in intensity or tautness; to become slack; to lag.
A reduction of a rating, as a financial or credit rating.
(rhetoric) Anesis.
(intransitive) To collapse heavily or helplessly.
(transitive) To lessen (something) in force or intensity; to moderate.
Lower; beneath something.
The act, process, or result of reducing.
To sink, in the middle, by its weight or under applied pressure, below a horizontal line or plane.
(chemistry) That causes reduction.
(intransitive) To fall end over end; to roll over and over.
(poker) Being a fixed limit game.
(figuratively) To weaken or work against; to hinder, sabotage.
(transitive) To make weaker or less strong.
(intransitive) To rest and become relieved of stress.
Having little difference or distance in place, position, or abstractly; see also close to.
(obsolete) Mitigated, alleviated.
Taking a long time to move or go a short distance, or to perform an action; not quick in motion; proceeding at a low speed.
(transitive) To reduce or lessen the severity of a pain or difficulty.
That which slows.
(transitive) To lower in value or social position.
(ergative) To (cause to) move in continuous contact with a surface.
A reduction or decrease of something harmful or unpleasant.
Of two (or, rarely, more than two) things: the smaller in size (littler), in value, in importance etc.
To the lowest degree.
Very small.
Small in size.
Not large or big; insignificant; few in number.
(transitive) To lower in character, quality, or value; to degrade.
In or to a lower place.
Lack of difficulty; the ability to do something easily.
The act of pulling back or withdrawing, as from something dangerous, or unpleasant.
(intransitive) To change place or posture; to go, in any manner, from one place or position to another.
(transitive) To repel or drive back.
Lesser, smaller in importance, size, degree, seriousness, or significance compared to another option, particularly:
With no or few possessions or money, particularly in relation to contemporaries who do have them.
(transitive) To strike or hit with the foot or other extremity of the leg.
More severely or seriously.
Lacking in force (usually strength) or ability.
(transitive) To state (something) with less completeness than needed; to minimise or downplay.
(intransitive) To dive, leap or rush (into water or some liquid); to submerge oneself.
(participial adjective) Having been cut.
A Kru language spoken by this people.
(heading, physical) To move or be moved into something.
That is used for cutting.
A slashing action or motion:
To physically place (something or someone somewhere).
Produced by undercutting.
Having no variations in height.
To a greater degree or extent.
Physically close.
Of a strong and cruel nature; eager and unsparing; grim; fierce; ruthless; savage.