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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
thinning
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
thinning (=becoming thinner because you are losing your hair)
▪ His dark hair was thinning on top.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
hair
▪ The eyes had sunken in and the skull was showing through the thinning hair of the pate.
▪ Unfortunately, there is no miracle cure for thinning hair but there are some very good treatments around.
▪ He was thick-set, with thinning hair brushed back, a magnificent walrus moustache and several missing teeth.
▪ The porter joined them, scratching his thinning hair.
▪ At its centre was a man of less than average height with thinning hair and a somewhat barrel-chested build.
▪ He was slim and fit with well-brushed thinning hair.
▪ Many factors can contribute to thinning hair, including stress, diet, illness and even pregnancy as well as the natural ageing process.
▪ He had thinning hair and a very lightweight suit in cream and white pinstripes.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ He stared at the old stooped man with the thinning grey hair and bushy walrus moustache who controlled the nation's money.
▪ He took encore after encore until the thinning crowd finally disappeared into the dark autumn evening.
▪ He was thick-set, with thinning hair brushed back, a magnificent walrus moustache and several missing teeth.
▪ The eyes had sunken in and the skull was showing through the thinning hair of the pate.
▪ The hair was already thinning and perhaps to compensate he had grown a luxuriant Groucho moustache which almost hid his mouth.
▪ The porter joined them, scratching his thinning hair.
▪ Unfortunately, there is no miracle cure for thinning hair but there are some very good treatments around.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Thinning

Thin \Thin\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Thinned; p. pr. & vb. n. Thinning.] [Cf. AS. ge[thorn]ynnian.] To make thin (in any of the senses of the adjective).

Wiktionary
thinning

vb. (present participle of thin English)

WordNet
thin
  1. adj. of relatively small extent from one surface to the opposite or in cross section; "thin wire"; "a thin chiffon blouse"; "a thin book"; "a thin layer of paint" [ant: thick]

  2. lacking excess flesh; "you can't be too rich or too thin"; "Yon Cassius has a lean and hungry look"-Shakespeare [syn: lean] [ant: fat]

  3. very narrow; "a thin line across the page" [syn: slender]

  4. having little substance or significance; "a flimsy excuse"; "slight evidence"; "a tenuous argument"; "a thin plot" [syn: flimsy, slight, tenuous]

  5. not dense; "a thin beard"; "trees were sparse" [syn: sparse]

  6. relatively thin in consistency or low in density; not viscous; "air is thin at high altitudes"; "a thin soup"; "skimmed milk is much thinner than whole milk"; "thin oil" [ant: thick]

  7. (of sound) lacking resonance or volume; "a thin feeble cry" [ant: full]

  8. lacking spirit or sincere effort; "a thin smile"

  9. [also: thinning, thinned, thinnest, thinner]

thin
  1. adv. without viscosity; "the blood was flowing thin" [syn: thinly] [ant: thickly]

  2. [also: thinning, thinned, thinnest, thinner]

thin
  1. v. lose thickness; become thin or thinner [ant: thicken]

  2. make thin or thinner; "Thin the solution" [ant: thicken]

  3. lessen the strength or flavor of a solution or mixture; "cut bourbon" [syn: dilute, thin out, reduce, cut]

  4. take off weight [syn: reduce, melt off, lose weight, slim, slenderize, slim down] [ant: gain]

  5. [also: thinning, thinned, thinnest, thinner]

thinning

n. the act of diluting something; "the cutting of whiskey with water"; "the thinning of paint with turpentine" [syn: cutting]

thinning

See thin

Wikipedia
Thinning

Thinning is a term used in agricultural sciences to mean the removal of some plants, or parts of plants, to make room for the growth of others.

Thinning (morphology)

Thinning is the transformation of a digital image into a simplified, but topologically equivalent image. It is a type of topological skeleton, but computed using mathematical morphology operators.

Thinning (disambiguation)
  • Thinning (ecology)
  • Thinning (morphology)
  • In engineering, a reduction in viscosity

Usage examples of "thinning".

Ahead, the pearlescent fog thickened, shimmering, coalescing then thinning as if trying to assume a form.

The once revered warrior has become revered once again, at least among the thinning ranks of Achaeans, appearing on his four-horsed chariot wherever the Greek lines appeared ready to give way, urging trench engineers to replace stakes and redig collapsed areas, improving the internal trenches with sand berms and firing slits, sending men and boys out as scouts at night to steal water from the Trojans, and always calling for the men to have heart.

He pondered the sluggish swirl of the deep mists that screened the sunshine and shrouded the mountains, the thinning groves of Bonnie Blues dotted with wilt and spotting, the lakes and rivers turned gray and clouded, and the meadows and grasslands grown sparse and wintry.

I came up a steepish ramp through thinning pines, and emerged at once from the shade of the gorge, onto an open plateau perhaps half a mile in width, and two or three hundred yards deep, like a wide ledge on the mountainside.

The forest was thinning, ash and leatherleaf and black elder giving way to willow and whitewood and wateroak, and some she did not recognize.

Some buttonwood trees, now thinning out with annual age, conveyed by their speckled trunks the notion of a changing social standard, white and brown, native and foreign, while the lines of maples stood on blackened boles like old retired seamen, bronzed in many voyages and planted home forever.

He betrayed his annoyance with a thinning of tone so slight that only Dama, of those in the office, heard and understood it.

Toxemia, Stress, Edema, Kidney Troubles, and just below your right big toe, Weight Problems, Anxiety and Thinning Hair.

He turned to Ekman, the Minister for Munitions, a pallid Northerner with thinning gingery hair.

A stout middle-class man of forty-eight with a large, plump face, thinning hair and a rather Germanic if good-natured appearance, he had begun his career in China as a language student in 1907, and had served as Consul in cities from Hankow to Chungking.

Gray hair sprang in thinning coils from her scalp, and she wore a flowered housedress with black plastic slip-ons.

It was not Vancourt, however, but Caroline, Lady Kenilworth, come to call in a cloud of French perfume and, Meg naughtily noted, a cloud of false French hair, neatly adjusted to hide her own thinning locks.

I was two miles away, a hundred leaps or more, and the air about me was thinning out as it thins under an air-pump, and the cold was gripping at my joints.

He was a fairly small man, immaculately dressed, but beginning to show his age, with thinning gray hair and heavy owllike glasses.

My father there -- that portly unshaven gent with his thinning hair flying up and his front false tooth out, wearing a food-stained shirt and, at midafternoon, pajama bottoms, with a frayed belt cinched over his potbelly to bolster the elastic waistband.