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    subside
    /səbˈsʌɪd/

    verb

    • 1. become less intense, violent, or severe: "I'll wait a few minutes until the storm subsides" Similar abatelet upmoderatecalmOpposite intensifyworsen
    • 2. (of water) go down to a lower or the normal level: "the floods subside almost as quickly as they arise" Similar recedeebbfall backflow backOpposite rise

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. SUBSIDE definition: 1. If a condition subsides, it becomes less strong or extreme: 2. If a building, land, or water…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of SUBSIDE is to sink or fall to the bottom : settle. How to use subside in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Subside.

  4. To subside is to die down or become less violent, like rough ocean waves after a storm has passed (or your seasickness, if you happened to be sailing on that ocean). Subside comes from the Latin prefix sub- (meaning "down") and the Latin verb sidere (meaning "to settle").

  5. 1. to become less loud, excited, violent, etc; abate. 2. to sink or fall to a lower level. 3. (Physical Geography) (of the surface of the earth, etc) to cave in; collapse. 4. (of sediment, etc) to sink or descend to the bottom; settle. [C17: from Latin subsīdere to settle down, from sub- down + sīdere to settle] subˈsider n.

  6. to become quiet, less active, or less violent; abate. The laughter subsided. 3. to sink or fall to the bottom; settle; precipitate. to cause coffee grounds to subside. SYNONYMS 1. decline, descend, settle. 2. diminish, lessen, wane, ebb. ANTONYMS 1. rise.

  7. SUBSIDE meaning: 1. to become less strong or extreme: 2. If a building subsides, it sinks down to a lower level.. Learn more.

  8. verb. subsided, subsides, subsiding. To become less active, intense, etc.; abate. Webster's New World. Similar definitions. To become smaller or less prominent, as swelling. American Heritage. To sink to a lower level. Webster's New World. Similar definitions. To sink or fall to the bottom; settle, as sediment. Webster's New World.

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