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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Abating

Abate \A*bate"\ ([.a]*b[=a]t"), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Abated, p. pr. & vb. n. Abating.] [OF. abatre to beat down, F. abattre, LL. abatere; ab or ad + batere, battere (popular form for L. batuere to beat). Cf. Bate, Batter.]

  1. To beat down; to overthrow. [Obs.]

    The King of Scots . . . sore abated the walls.
    --Edw. Hall.

  2. To bring down or reduce from a higher to a lower state, number, or degree; to lessen; to diminish; to contract; to moderate; to cut short; as, to abate a demand; to abate pride, zeal, hope.

    His eye was not dim, nor his natural force abated.
    --Deut. xxxiv. 7.

  3. To deduct; to omit; as, to abate something from a price.

    Nine thousand parishes, abating the odd hundreds.
    --Fuller.

  4. To blunt. [Obs.]

    To abate the edge of envy.
    --Bacon.

  5. To reduce in estimation; to deprive. [Obs.]

    She hath abated me of half my train.
    --Shak.

  6. (Law)

    1. To bring entirely down or put an end to; to do away with; as, to abate a nuisance, to abate a writ.

    2. (Eng. Law) To diminish; to reduce. Legacies are liable to be abated entirely or in proportion, upon a deficiency of assets.

      To abate a tax, to remit it either wholly or in part.

Wiktionary
abating

n. (context rhetoric English) anesis. vb. (present participle of abate English)

WordNet
abating

adj : decreasing in amount or intensity [syn: subsiding]

Usage examples of "abating".

But for all the dangers and vicissitudes they underwent, she and her crew might have borne charmed lives up to within an hour of the abating of the hurricane.

The rain was abating, the dawn's steel smear pushing through the heavy clouds to the east, the wind falling off into fitful gusts.