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slim
[ slim ]
adjective
- slender, as in girth or form; slight in build or structure.
Synonyms: thin
Antonyms: fat
- poor or inferior:
a slim chance; a slim excuse.
- small or inconsiderable; meager; scanty:
a slim income.
Synonyms: paltry, trivial, trifling, insignificant
Antonyms: abundant, considerable
- sized for the thinner than average person.
verb (used with object)
- to make slim.
verb (used without object)
- to become slim.
- Chiefly British. to try to become more slender, especially by dieting.
noun
- a garment size meant for a thin person.
verb phrase
- to lose weight, especially intentionally.
- (of a business) to reduce operating expenses; economize.
slim
1/ slɪm /
adjective
- small in width relative to height or length
- small in amount or quality
slim chances of success
verb
- to make or become slim, esp by diets and exercise
- to reduce or decrease or cause to be reduced or decreased
Slim
2/ slɪm /
noun
- the E African name for AIDS
Slim
3/ slɪm /
noun
- SlimWilliam Joseph, 1st Viscount18911970MBritishMILITARY: generalPOLITICS: statesman William Joseph , 1st Viscount. 1891–1970, British field marshal, who commanded (1943–45) the 14th Army in the reconquest of Burma (now called Myanmar) from the Japanese; governor general of Australia (1953–60)
Derived Forms
- ˈslimly, adverb
- ˈslimmer, noun
- ˈslimness, noun
Other Words From
- slimly adverb
- slimness noun
- un·slim adjective
- un·slimly adverb
- un·slimness noun
- un·slimmed adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of slim1
Word History and Origins
Origin of slim1
Origin of slim2
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Trump's contempt for congressional Republicans was already manifesting in his vampiric posture towards their slim majority.
A slim science fiction novel that looks at our “precious and precarious” world through the eyes of six astronauts on the International Space Station has won the 2024 Booker Prize.
It is often a race won by slim margins.
As Trump takes office, Republicans have control of the Senate and could still take the House, albeit by a slim margin.
But this time, the proposal, combined with the other restructuring measures, won over a slim majority of voters in the Nov. 5 election.
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