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verb

wane

wayn
verb
1
To gradually become weaker, smaller, or less intense.
"His enthusiasm for the project began to wane after a few months."
"Support for the policy waned as the economy improved."
2
Of the moon, to appear to shrink night by night after the full moon.
"The moon waned steadily over the following two weeks."
noun
1
The phase of decline, especially as in the expression "on the wane."
"The empire's power was clearly on the wane by that century."

How to Use Wane

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishTo gradually shrink, fade, or lose strength — classically used for the moon, but also for interest, power, or influence.

Common mistake

Often paired with "wax" in the phrase "wax and wane" (grow then shrink) — don't use "wane" to mean growing.

Common pairings
wax and wane on the wane interest wanes influence waning

Word Forms

waned past tense, wanes plural, wanes plural, wanes plural, wanes singular

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Fill the Gap

Can you complete this real example?

His enthusiasm for the project began to _____ after a few months.

Etymology

From Old English wana, meaning "lack" or "deficiency" — the same ancient root underlies "want" and "wan," all connected to the idea of something falling short or emptying out.

Antonyms

wax

Related Words

Rhymes for wane

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Definitions: FreeDict original editorial