Definition of 'dim'
Verb
- switch (a car's headlights) from a higher to a lower beam
Synonyms: dip - become or make darker; "The screen darkened"; "He darkened the colors by adding brown"
Synonyms: darken
Antonyms: brighten - become dim or lusterless; "the lights dimmed and the curtain rose"
- make dim or lusterless; "Time had dimmed the silver"
- make dim by comparison or conceal
Synonyms: blind - become vague or indistinct; "The distinction between the two theories blurred"
Synonyms: blur slur
Antonyms: focus focalize focalise
Adjective
- lacking in light; not bright or harsh; "a dim light beside the bed"; "subdued lights and soft music"
Synonyms: subdued - lacking clarity or distinctness; "a dim figure in the distance"; "only a faint recollection"; "shadowy figures in the gloom"; "saw a vague outline of a building through the fog"; "a few wispy memories of childhood"
Synonyms: faint shadowy vague wispy - made dim or less bright; "the dimmed houselights brought a hush of anticipation"; "dimmed headlights"; "we like dimmed lights when we have dinner"
Synonyms: dimmed
Antonyms: undimmed bright - offering little or no hope; "the future looked black"; "prospects were bleak"; "Life in the Aran Islands has always been bleak and difficult"- J.M.Synge; "took a dim view of things"
Synonyms: black bleak - slow to learn or understand; lacking intellectual acuity; "so dense he never understands anything I say to him"; "never met anyone quite so dim"; "although dull at classical learning, at mathematics he was uncommonly quick"- Thackeray; "dumb officials make some really dumb decisions"; "he was either normally stupid or being deliberately obtuse"; "worked with the slow students"
Synonyms: dense dull dumb obtuse slow