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Looking for synonyms for "miniature"? Browse alternatives ranked by relevance — sharper word choices for fiction, poetry, and copywriting.
(n)
The act of illuminating, or supplying with light; the state of being illuminated.
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(adj)
Small in size.
Something to play with, especially as intended for use by a child.
Not large or big; insignificant; few in number.
A smaller system which is seen as representative of a larger one.
(informal) A picture, especially a photographic image.
The highest value reached by some quantity in a time period.
(chiefly computing) A small picture, used as a compact representation of a larger image.
Small, relatively small; used to contrast levels of the noun modified.
A person who serves as a human template for artwork or fashion.
Initialism of Insane Clown Posse: an American hip hop duo formed in 1989.
The embodiment or encapsulation of a class of items.
Miniature, tiny, small.
Very small.
Having a modest scope or extent.
A very young human, particularly from birth to a couple of years old or until walking is fully mastered.
Easily damaged or requiring careful handling.
(Incoterm) Initialism of carriage and insurance paid to.
(often derogatory) Having little or no importance.
The color of grass and leaves; a primary additive color midway between yellow and blue which is evoked by light between roughly 495–570 nm.
Lesser, smaller in importance, size, degree, seriousness, or significance compared to another option, particularly:
(v)
(UK, colloquial) To urinate.
reduced to the smallest possible size or amount or degree
(N)
Micro (Greek letter μ, mu, non-italic) is a unit prefix in the metric system denoting a factor of 10−6 (one millionth).
(especially of a woman) Fairly short and of slim build.
A unit of time which is one sixtieth of an hour (sixty seconds).
Very small; tiny.
(clothing) A bag stitched to an item of clothing, used for carrying small items.
Closely packed or densely constituted; having much material in a small volume.
(colloquial) Comparatively small in size.
Small enough to fit into a pocket.
below the usual or expected size
(childish, informal) tiny
(often capitalized) A member of one of various Ancient Equatorial African tribal peoples, notable for their very short stature.
Very small, diminutive
The act or process of miniaturizing or making smaller.
(often attributive) A small or miniature scale, but larger than microscale.
Miniature size; tendency towards miniature size.
(rare) A minimizing or making small.
(British spelling) Alternative spelling of miniaturization. [The act or process of miniaturizing or making smaller.]
A particularly small miniature.
Any item smaller than that considered miniature, especially electronic and electromechanical devices
(uncountable, marketing) Very short copy.
A very small or microscopic scale.
One who, or that which, miniaturizes.
A photograph so reduced in size that it must be viewed through a lens or a microscope.
An act in which a company downsizes or is downsized.
Alternative form of microminiaturization. [The process of microminiaturizing.]
The process of subminiaturizing.
The smallest possible amount, quantity, or degree.
The process of microminiaturizing.
A unit of volume, in the Imperial and U.S. customary systems, ¹⁄₆₀ fluid drachm. Approximately equal to 1 drop, 62 μL or 0.9 grain (weight) of water.
(chiefly humorous) A person who is a miniature, but otherwise identical, version of a particular person.
Reduction to ultraminiature size.
That which minimizes.
Abnormal smallness of the body; dwarfism.
(British) The process by which a material is reduced in size, often to micrometre proportions.
A representation on a smaller scale.
A hallucination or visual disorder in which objects appear smaller or more distant than they are; micropsia.
(genetics) A plasmid that has been reduced in size
The property of being tiny; minuteness.
(obsolete) A small or insignificant person, thing or amount.
A form of hallucination where objects appear smaller than they really are.
Any part (of a fabricated assembly) having a dimension much less than a millimeter.
The belief that physical extents can be divided into amounts of smallest size, or minima.
A miniature version
(biology, medicine) Unusually small size, as the result of a developmental abnormality.
(especially clothing) That is extra small (the manufactured size).
A tooth that is smaller than usual.
A scale used by surveyors for reducing chains and links to acres and rods.
A minor, small-scale spectacle (impressive event).
A small or miniature system (of various kinds).
(medicine) The condition of having abnormally small mammary glands.
An alteration to a process or technique so that it can be used in microscale scenarios.
(US) Alternative spelling of micronisation. [(British) The process by which a material is reduced in size, often to micrometre proportions.]
A subdivision of a scale.
Reproduction of text, drawings, etc. at a very small size, as on microcard, microfiche, etc.
An extremely small quantity.
A microscale perspective or viewpoint.
A microscale model.
A map that is very small or describes a very small area.
A diminutive or miniature world; a microcosm.
(physics, metrology) Synonym of micrometre (“one-millionth of a metre”).
A very small or microscopic mark.
(informal) A micronation.
A function that operates on a very small scale
Dated form of microanatomy. [Microscopic anatomy: the anatomy of minuscule structures, at microscopic scale.]
A document or similar item of data reduced to a microscopic format for easier storage.
A scale somewhat smaller than mesoscale.
A fan or enthusiast of the MINI Cooper, both past and present generations of the car.
(pathology) A disorder in which objects appear much smaller than normal, most often the result of a neurological dysfunction.
(often attributive) Very small bulk.
A miniature print.