How To Use Dwindling In A Sentence

  • If there was any hope of holding on to even a shred of her dwindling self-respect, she should do exactly what she knew Margo would do—close the laptop, take her de-scrunchied, perfumed, and nearly thonged self down to the nearest club, pick up the first passably good-looking stranger who asked her to dance, and bring him back to the apartment for some safe but anonymous sex. Goodnight Tweetheart
  • Tickets for other Amalgamation matches should soon be available and it is hoped that more extensive advertising and a reduced number of contests at favoured venues will see a reverse in the dwindling attendances.
  • As we enter what is sure to be a long period of uncertainty—a gantlet of lost jobs, dwindling assets, home foreclosures and two continuing wars—the downside of stress is certainly worth exploring.
  • The crowds which have been passing to and fro during the whole day, are rapidly dwindling away; and the noise of shouting and quarrelling which issues from the public – houses, is almost the only sound that breaks the melancholy stillness of the night. Sketches by Boz
  • As the years passed, historians and journalists sought out the dwindling band of those who had survived the earthquake. Times, Sunday Times
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  • Every day of the week some green doom-monger can be heard in lament for the dwindling or extinction of some bird or other.
  • And just this week, it was announced that supplies are dwindling and prices are expected to spike as weather warms.
  • He is struggling to come to terms with his dwindling authority.
  • The aircraft circled the vessel for an hour before dwindling fuel reserves forced its return to Hawaii. Times, Sunday Times
  • Action on dwindling fish reserves is overdue. Times, Sunday Times
  • The average age of the typical crop duster is 60, the number of crop dusters is dwindling, and the profession can be dangerous. 10 Businesses Set for Extinction in 10 Years | Impact Lab
  • Once they find takings dwindling they will be off and away to pastures new and local traders will not be able to afford the high rents and rates, so lots of empty shops.
  • There is still a risk that dwindling household spending power and gloomy consumer sentiment will derail this recovery. Times, Sunday Times
  • The number of wild animals on the earth is dwindling.
  • Rather than sitting out in the open and reloading, he is better served with a gun that will take one of your dwindling supply of high capacity magazines.
  • Until now, abrasive laser whitening treatments have often been a painful process for both sensitive teeth and dwindling bank balances. The Sun
  • He was simply responding to the twin pressures of dwindling tax revenues and pressing needs.
  • The Confederation of British Industry said dwindling gas reserves could lead to factory shutdowns and power cuts.
  • Sanctions from Arab League member states would exacerbate the damage to Syria's already atrophied economy, following a European oil embargo and dwindling foreign-exchange reserves. Arab League Delays Discipline Against Syria
  • There was little relief for dwindling water supplies, with only a small amount of water falling in the Rocky Creek Dam catchment.
  • In 1998, Government inspectors placed the school under special measures following an Ofsted report which highlighted bad management, lack of resources and dwindling numbers, a situation which remained unrectified until last year.
  • Polls in Japan show support for whaling is dwindling among the mainstream public.
  • He claims brewery rent of 42,000 a year and dwindling trade mean he must work 80 hours a week just to stay afloat. The Sun
  • After an hour of on-and-off chit-chat and with our supply of lamingtons fast dwindling we decide to cut the poor kids loose.
  • Such a policy would needlessly destroy millions of acres of already dwindling sage-steppe habitat that supports sage grouse and other grassland species, such as pronghorn, mule deer and golden eagles.
  • The archbishop, who is president of the Pontifical Council for Culture, said dwindling numbers of worshippers at some churches meant it now made sense to sell, or even destroy, the buildings.
  • He sullied his already dwindling credibility with an exhibition of arrogance, bad taste and egotism that made for queasy viewing.
  • He lifted his hands to the skies and sounded a long weird call that seemed to shudder endlessly out into space, dwindling and fading, yet never dying out, only receding farther and farther into some unreckoned cosmos. Wings in the Night
  • Instead of Herculean swigs of liquor, Nick uses his dwindling funds on cases of Pabst Blue Ribbon, trying to keep enough of a buzz going to deaden the pain of his predicament until he eventually falls asleep. Jonathan Kim: ReThink Review: Everything Must Go -- Will Ferrell Gets Serious
  • A free man, this Edric was said to be, farming a yardland as a rent-paying tenant of his lord, a dwindling phenomenon in a country where a tiller of the soil was increasingly tied to it by customary services. An Excellent Mystery
  • I think good manners are dwindling from road users generally: motorist, pedestrian and cyclist. Times, Sunday Times
  • Since the official repeal of corvée labor in the 1920s, settler employers had faced a dwindling supply of local workers.
  • The result is that dwindling numbers of children are bussed to distant schools where they mingle with others who live many miles away.
  • But the regime has refused to release its dwindling foreign currency reserves to replenish drug stocks. Times, Sunday Times
  • Until now, abrasive laser whitening treatments have often been a painful process for both sensitive teeth and dwindling bank balances. The Sun
  • With rental income dwindling to a mere trickle on many estates in 1880-81, signs of alarm in the Big House were not hard to find.
  • Society in general, and the general decline in the nation's moral responsibilities, is also named as the reason for dwindling congregations and religious desertion.
  • Supplies of coal are dwindling fast.
  • However, the London stock market where it is such a powerful force is dwindling in importance as a source of company finance.
  • : 00AM 'Twas the fifth day 'fore Christmas and all through the towns Recalling the past year brought smiles and frowns The readers were anxious, and so we will show 'em It's time once again for the Action Line poem Recession, economy, job loss and more Were issues that really should come to the fore Reality's something we don't reconcile When everyone lives in a state of denial For instance, the Realtors push ritzy condos On people with pickups all covered with Bondo The city spends fortunes to make Chapman snow While staffers and programs are told they must go And what's the surprise of a fierce winter storm We live in the mountains and it's just the norm You'd think that the city would figure by now When flakes are a'falling, you go out and plow The county commission, its head in the sand, Can't seem to come up with the zones for the land With gas money dwindling and going away The budgeting process will lead us astray Joelle switches parties, the Dems she did ditch Progressives were angry and cried "bait and switch Durangoherald.com
  • There is a feeling that the numerical strength of the armed forces is dwindling and that the Navy, too, is feeling the pinch.
  • The leges Iuliae, or Julian laws, were introduced in apparent response to a dwindling marriage rate among the Roman elite and contained strict new measures aimed at cracking down on such laxity while offering economic incentives to marry and procreate. Caesars’ Wives
  • He is one of a dwindling number of farmers who depend sorely on farming for a living.
  • Therefore, every being must at length be saved from misery, if not by redemptive atonement then by absolvent annihilation, and one absolute heaven finally absorb the dwindling hells. The Destiny of the Soul A Critical History of the Doctrine of a Future Life
  • Villages that suffered dwindling numbers are already benefiting from the asylum seekers' arrival. Times, Sunday Times
  • It had become a tradition to have a huge grilled beefsteak dinner in honor of the Snowgrazer's dwindling use of land foods.
  • New home-grown stars are a dwindling band. The Sun
  • How to tackle the dwindling popularity of malls and main street? Times, Sunday Times
  • State guarantees to cover decommissioning costs are expected to wipe out dwindling tax receipts. Times, Sunday Times
  • Living proof that RNC prominence is fading and the ovine followers are dwindling in number since savvy people are beginning to see the light instead of being allowed to be smitten by blind fanaticism. Poll: New Jersey gubernatorial race tightens up
  • But the species is dwindling fast and is feared on the verge of extinction.
  • The choice of successor will be important as the charity copes with a declining membership and dwindling financial reserves. Times, Sunday Times
  • The dwindling band of optimists suffered four blows last week. Times, Sunday Times
  • Hospitals and poor houses found the charitable bequests on which they had always relied dwindling, and, as ecclesiastical institutions, they were cut off from further endowments by legislation of 1749 restricting mortmain.
  • The party membership has been dwindling down in the last few month.
  • New home-grown stars are a dwindling band. The Sun
  • Fifteen years on, and the honourable member is a chancellor presiding over dwindling dole queues and a booming economy.
  • Due to the dwindling supplies of naphthenic based crude reserves, a suitable replacement oil must be found for electrical apparatus.
  • When we turn on the news and see a bunch of new-age hippies tied to trees trying to stop the never-ending progress of tarmacadam through our dwindling green and cultural areas we all too often take no notice.
  • But despite developing their songcraft in the years since, dwindling album sales have seen them slip off the radar of popular imagination.
  • Around the same time, the timber supply in the Midwest was dwindling, forcing loggers to seek new sources of "green gold.
  • I think good manners are dwindling from road users generally: motorist, pedestrian and cyclist. Times, Sunday Times
  • The chances of getting a top price at float were dwindling by the day. Times, Sunday Times
  • Britain's biggest arterial roads are deserted at night and the drivers say there is little chance of being caught by a dwindling number of traffic police. Times, Sunday Times
  • Is it not up to the property owner to see for himself that his real estate is dwindling in value?
  • High costs and dwindling production from ageing fields have left large parts of the industry uneconomic. Times, Sunday Times
  • There are complaints of not enough prize money in the lower echelons and too much low-grade racing in an economic environment of dwindling owner investment. Times, Sunday Times
  • Britain's biggest arterial roads are deserted at night and the drivers say there is little chance of being caught by a dwindling number of traffic police. Times, Sunday Times
  • Jobs requiring mere brawn are dwindling, replaced by lower-paid jobs requiring skill, education and a high degree of interpersonal polish.
  • I think good manners are dwindling from road users generally: motorist, pedestrian and cyclist. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Coalition has made blunders as hospitals strain to cope with soaring demand and dwindling resources. The Sun
  • To get days off, he continually dips his hands into his quickly dwindling leave balance.
  • As the years passed, historians and journalists sought out the dwindling band of those who had survived the earthquake. Times, Sunday Times
  • The council's financial experts say action is vital because of the Government pressing extra responsibilities on all councils without giving extra funding and the fact its £30m savings are dwindling fast.
  • It reopened after the war to dwindling attendance because of the people's unforgiving response to its withdrawal four years before.
  • The future looked dismal due to the lack of spare tires and a dwindling oxygen supply.
  • Similarly, in "Reptiles," a flat, stylized lizard lifts its head from a sketchbook page inscribed with interlocking lizard shapes and, with increasing dimension and detail, takes a stroll around the artist's desk before dwindling once more to two dimensions. NYT > Home Page
  • The dwindling supplies of crude oil and natural gas are frequently discussed in newspaper articles.
  • Nursing and support staff do a wonderful job but are constantly under pressure from ever dwindling resources.
  • The gloomy outlook on bonuses comes as investment banks worldwide are retrenching in the face of dwindling business volumes.
  • It blames dwindling reserves and rising oil prices. Times, Sunday Times
  • The available seats are dwindling in number, though. Times, Sunday Times
  • Will they use Facebook to organize a 20,000-person rally for a carbon tax, or call a sit-in on one of our dwindling glaciers? Craig and Marc Kielburger: Government Transparency 2.0
  • Supplies of coal are dwindling fast.
  • The world is competing for dwindling oil reserves, water supplies and other resources; it is a time when rational minds will be needed to build a better world.
  • He noted that the absence of security around the salt pile probably led the freeloaders to just help themselves, but the loss has since motivated the company to put some security fencing around the dwindling salt pile.
  • He said the farm's workforce was dwindling, with only four full-time employees.
  • The speaker's words mirror that disorder, the inability to sustain coherent thought, dwindling to glossolalia.
  • His death was undoubtedly merciful, but he left a sad gap among his dwindling circle of friends.
  • Continuing their protest tomorrow will only squander what dwindling public support they have left.
  • As union membership is itself dwindling, this is unsustainable as well as unwelcome. Times, Sunday Times
  • Dwindling disposable income during the recession has left nightclubs, which typically charge an entry fee, relying on cut-price tickets and drinks promotions to keep hold of partygoers.
  • Then the whole tacky and demoralised affair will descend into brawling as each union fights for its own factional interests, including grabbing a greater share of the rapidly dwindling dues base.
  • Pubs have also struggled with dwindling custom caused by the smoking ban. The Sun
  • Internet start-up companies, which bought the bulk of online ads, are increasingly selective about where they put their dwindling dollars.
  • I think good manners are dwindling from road users generally: motorist, pedestrian and cyclist. Times, Sunday Times
  • Dwindling demand for council housing means there are about 3,000 empty properties in the city.
  • You are lucky these days if you have a good butcher on your doorstep, because this dwindling trade is where you will find the best meat bargains. Times, Sunday Times
  • A major cause of the dwindling numbers has been degradation of habitat through overstocking of sheep, bush encroachment, cultivation, erosion and alien invaders.
  • Archie performs his moth-eaten variety act before dwindling audiences in dog-eared music hall theatres.
  • The town, and county, already hit by shortage due to World War II, now were further discomforted by dwindling butter stocks.
  • His coworkers seem to find his endless prattling about his dwindling sales repetitive and boring.
  • In the bad years, one of the reactions to the dwindling cash flow was to dispense with the youth academy. Times, Sunday Times
  • [Palin] stands for a genuine movement: a dwindling white nonurban America that is aflame with grievances and awash in self-pity as the country hurtles into the 21st century and leaves it behind," New York Times 7/11/09 Patrick Sauer: An Interview With Nick Reding, Author of Methland
  • But the regime has refused to release its dwindling foreign currency reserves to replenish drug stocks. Times, Sunday Times
  • So anyone can see why my attention was dwindling about halfway through first period.
  • The aircraft circled the vessel for an hour before dwindling fuel reserves forced its return to Hawaii. Times, Sunday Times
  • There is a danger that it is dwindling away. Times, Sunday Times
  • But the regime has refused to release its dwindling foreign currency reserves to replenish drug stocks. Times, Sunday Times
  • The 34-year-old is attracting sellout crowds amid dwindling interest among young Spaniards in bullfighting, which dates back as far as 1090 when a "corrida" was held to celebrate the marriage of King Alfonso VI's daughter. Bloomberg
  • Mediaset is also struggling with a still-shrinking audience for its free-to-air channels, as well as dwindling advertising revenue in a stagnant economy. Mediaset Is Hit in Italy's Turmoil
  • You are lucky these days if you have a good butcher on your doorstep, because this dwindling trade is where you will find the best meat bargains. Times, Sunday Times
  • Although he shut down his station Monday, except to fuel up emergency vehicles, Araki, 39, granted a few gallons from his dwindling supplies to desperate drivers from the worst-affected areas. In Japan, a spirit of cooperation spreads
  • James Enge on Star Trek, specifically on the dwindling uniqueness of actors: "If I [...] were in charge of rebooting the Star Trek franchise, I'd be trying [to] represent a wider cross-section of humanity ... and I'd be trying to find some actors who can maybe project a little alienness even before they go into makeup (or the CGI equivalent). February 2009
  • Among writers in the North Ibsen began to hold very much the position that Whistler was taking among painters and etchers in this country, that is to say the abuse and ridicule of his works by a dwindling group of elderly conventional critics merely stung into more frenzied laudation an ever-widening circle of youthful admirers. Henrik Ibsen
  • There they dried off and set about to use their fishing net to replenish their dwindling food supply.
  • The dwindling band of optimists suffered four blows last week. Times, Sunday Times
  • A dwindling urine output progressing to oliguria is the renal manifestation of ACS, even when blood pressure is normal.
  • There are complaints of not enough prize money in the lower echelons and too much low-grade racing in an economic environment of dwindling owner investment. Times, Sunday Times
  • But in his present situation, his dwindling resources could not feed even one mouth.
  • In the West, in Europe and America, the big economic story is a demographic one — a rapidly ageing population and a dwindling tax take with which to support our increasingly doddery citizens.
  • Only an ever-dwindling, anti-social minority still persist in drinking and driving.
  • He is struggling to come to terms with his dwindling authority.
  • In this time of e-books, Ipad apps, dwindling sales of traditional books, and fear that we are going to hell in a handbasket where do you think things will be by the time you are ready for a second edition of your book, say ten years from now? Monica Edinger: A Book About Children's Books for Book Loving Adults
  • The largest problems they face now are lack of adequate funds to maintain proper care of their animals and dwindling land resources.
  • The surge in funds from the rich is a welcome fillip for charities worried about dwindling funds during the economic downturn. Times, Sunday Times
  • Structural steel fabricators and erectors are being hit particularly hard as they face the dual challenge of increased foreign competition in a dwindling market.
  • One of a slew of DIY gardening currents, such as permaculture (design of highly sustainable ecosystems), urban homesteading, composting and free fruit movement, guerrilla gardening is a response to dwindling green space, limited land and suspicions about food sources, say experts. Guerrilla gardener movement takes root in L.A. area « Isegoria
  • Health chiefs are looking more and more at measures to conserve blood stocks due to concerns over dwindling numbers of blood donors as well as the risks of infection from blood products.
  • Natural prey is vanishing in the dwindling forests, resulting in leopards hunting cattle and people for food.
  • But the number of animals with the protective adaptation is dwindling, as local farmers give up their taurine herds for large zebu animals.
  • The party membership has been dwindling down in the last few month.
  • The widespread worry about the fast dwindling wildlife of the country has been alleviated to some extent by the establishment of wildlife sanctuaries and National parks.
  • Rabbits are running rampant, dormice numbers are dwindling and otters are on the increase.
  • Countdown to complete mental breakdown by Micheletti and his dwindling core of supporters (and, yes, that includes a grouplet of US expats that have been blogging constant disinformation from Honduras - their self-delusion and dishonesty to all is now crashing on the rocks of reality, too). Tom Hayden: Zelaya Returns Through Bold Direct Action
  • But by now biologists have observed them attacking adult saddlebacks (a native songbird whose numbers are dwindling) and devouring eggs of the little shearwater (a native petrel).
  • As the sun rose higher into the morning sky, circuits went inside her greymass, flaring up and dwindling to ash.
  • Fur seals and penguins are most at risk due to dwindling food supplies. The Sun
  • New home-grown stars are a dwindling band. The Sun
  • The tribe typically runs about 17, 000 head of cattle on its ranges, but the numbers are dwindling.
  • He said the bowling club left two or three years ago due to dwindling numbers rather than excessive rent.
  • The budget surplus that helped underpin the economy has evaporated and the trade surplus is dwindling rapidly, analysts say. Argentine President's Win Gives Her Easy Path to Re-Election
  • The pharmacist there showed me empty pallets and the dwindling stocks of life-saving anti-retroviral drugs, or ARVs, on hand for the hundreds of patients who come to the dispensary every day. Ray Suarez: Reporter's Notebook: A Clinic's Strains in Mozambique
  • The former, as it grows hereabout, is short and scrubby, with branches nearly to the ground, and looks like the dwindling remnant of a greater race. Winter Sunshine
  • Action on dwindling fish reserves is overdue. Times, Sunday Times
  • Whether that embraces the dwindling army of comic artists remains to be seen. The Sun
  • His own identity was fading into a grey impalpable world: the solid world itself, which these dead had one time reared and lived in, was dissolving and dwindling
  • It could lead to changes in the way biologists monitor the species, as well as efforts to boost the dwindling population.
  • As churchman, he upheld ecclesiastical discipline in Italy and Dalmatia, maintained authority in the vicariate of Illyricum, restructured the dioceses of his dwindling patriarchate, and laboured to convert Jews and pagan rustics.
  • There is still a risk that dwindling household spending power and gloomy consumer sentiment will derail this recovery. Times, Sunday Times
  • Newsweek" latest cover in fact covers the nations dwindling sex drive; 15 to 20 percent of marriages are defined as sexless, where sex is rare, if nonexistent. CNN Transcript Jun 24, 2003
  • It is feared that dwindling gas stocks could lead to factory shutdowns and a return to the three-day week.
  • He wonders what we will tell the next generation about what we did with the world's dwindling supply of helium. Times, Sunday Times
  • The aircraft circled the vessel for an hour before dwindling fuel reserves forced its return to Hawaii. Times, Sunday Times
  • While many would argue, in rebuttal, that saving grizzlies from extinction in the Lower 48 States has, in fact, been a major conservation success story and a sign of hope for dwindling wild carnivore populations around the world, Fischer suggests that because the bruins have had dangerous mortal run-ins with people and prey upon domestic livestock, that the rare creatures should be eliminated. Todd Wilkinson: Idaho Pastor Calls For 'Open Season' on Yellowstone Grizzlies
  • Craftspeople in the ancient city of Nara are struggling to boost the dwindling local industry for producing Japanese "sumi" black ink, which is commonly used for traditional Latest Articles
  • Remember, when teams lose, those players are eliminated from the ever-dwindling player pool.
  • Six months after the ban came into force, livery yards, farriers, blacksmiths and those who make saddlery and hunting clothes are starting to suffer from the dwindling numbers of hunters.
  • If ever there is a place to grasp the climatic and environmental changes in China, it is not out on the vast plains, where herdsmen and farmers battle over dwindling water resources and tillable land.
  • But the regime has refused to release its dwindling foreign currency reserves to replenish drug stocks. Times, Sunday Times
  • And though the necessities of modern life, the decay of wealth, the dwindling of old aristocracy, and the absorption of what was once an independent state in the Italian nation, have obliterated that large signorial splendour of the Middle Ages, we feel that the modern Sienese are not unworthy of their courteous ancestry. Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece, Third series
  • By one count, 1 in 3 of the 5,743 known species of frog, toad, salamander, and other amphibians are dwindling.
  • The 125-year-old chain filed for Chapter 11 protections from creditors in July after years of anemic earnings and dwindling sales.
  • Christmastide is the time of year when the Western media focuses some attention on the dwindling Christian population in the Middle East. Stephen Zunes: U.S. Deserves Its Share of Blame for Fate of Arab Christians
  • there is no greater sadness that the dwindling away of a family
  • Bird feeders, and those that maintain them, play an invaluable role in the sustenance of countless birds otherwise threatened by dwindling habitat and resources.
  • The bounceback in popularity follows a decade of dwindling sales. The Sun
  • Would you have us abandon our great hopes, crawl back to the cluster, embrace our fatal allomorphic heritage, and go down to extinction as we exhaust the balance of our dwindling resources? Sagittarius Whorl
  • I've used humor to point out her hypocrisies (as well as those of the pageant itself) and as a result was called misogynistic and intolerant by the likes of Bill 'Loofa' O'Reilly and his dwindling followers. Boy culture
  • It was the year that the general public -- the part that thinks about comics, anyway -- decided that they're all graphic novels, and the ever-dwindling mass of nerds who populate and support the nation's comics shops were torn between calling 32-page comics (and their stapled brethren) "floppies" or "pamphlets. The ADD Blog at Comic Book Galaxy
  • Researchers say dwindling fish stocks due to trawling by foreign fishing fleets is a key cause of the increase in the ‘bush meat’ trade in Ghana.
  • The aircraft circled the vessel for an hour before dwindling fuel reserves forced its return to Hawaii. Times, Sunday Times
  • Britain's North Sea oil supply is dwindling, forcing the oilmen into ever more expensive offshore exploration in ever deeper water.
  • Unofficial paths and access ways are now closed off to walkers, cyclists and horse riders, forcing them to run the gauntlet of the traffic on the roads to reach the dwindling recreation areas.
  • What interests me here is not so much the dwindling of attention spans, as what I call 'nuggeting' -- scanning only for the important points, the catching points where the eye and the brain latch on to information -- a point of change or transition or a contrast. February 2009
  • He wonders what we will tell the next generation about what we did with the world's dwindling supply of helium. Times, Sunday Times
  • The working class was a dwindling band and it had no other political home. Times, Sunday Times
  • May was a sad time for the hill community, with the deaths of two of that ever-dwindling band of cragsmen.
  • Adam muttered darkly under his breath about what he was going to do to a younger brother and shoved Sport after the quickly dwindling form of the pinto.
  • The aircraft circled the vessel for an hour before dwindling fuel reserves forced its return to Hawaii. Times, Sunday Times
  • For that dwindling portion of the population employed in manual labour, alternative work could be supplied.
  • We decamped to Freedom, the micro-brewery across the road, and flopped down on the long comfy seats, where we stayed for the next four hours, the size of the group slowly dwindling until eventually there was only four of us left.
  • The aircraft circled the vessel for an hour before dwindling fuel reserves forced its return to Hawaii. Times, Sunday Times
  • Fisheries science has long argued that whalers were killing too many whales and that their numbers were dwindling alarmingly.
  • He claims brewery rent of 42,000 a year and dwindling trade mean he must work 80 hours a week just to stay afloat. The Sun
  • Not for them payouts in the order of £1.3 million, for them there is nothing but the dole queue, as they sit and watch the value of their business dwindling to unsaleability.
  • She kicked her band off the stage after a few songs, streamed snot and hacked up phlegm from a lung infection, almost tore her own hands apart singing solo, and dragged a dwindling crowd along on a schizophrenic but mesmerising journey.
  • The choice of successor will be important as the charity copes with a declining membership and dwindling financial reserves. Times, Sunday Times
  • Villages that suffered dwindling numbers are already benefiting from the asylum seekers' arrival. Times, Sunday Times
  • The so-called “second wave” has breathed new life into a protest that was dwindling in fervor by the day. Global Voices in English » Georgia: Opposition protests enter fifth day
  • Archie performs his moth-eaten variety act before dwindling audiences in dog-eared music hall theatres.
  • The Coalition has made blunders as hospitals strain to cope with soaring demand and dwindling resources. The Sun
  • Nursing and support staff do a wonderful job but are constantly under pressure from ever dwindling resources.
  • The elephant population is dwindling.
  • The elephant population is dwindling.
  • And our dwindling supply of eggs is getting more addled with every day that ticks by.
  • They are looking currently for high protein hay, and that would be lucerne, vetch and clover hay and those stocks are dwindling.
  • It blames dwindling reserves and rising oil prices. Times, Sunday Times
  • Proposed changes would phase out that support system, but guarantee farmers a gradually dwindling subsidy payment over the next seven years.
  • Probably out of a discontent with the dwindling resources dedicated to film in the traditional media, we onliners are defining our own film culture as we go along.

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