0 to become smaller, or to make something smaller -- kurczyć (się)
1 a doctor trained to help people with mental or emotional problems -- psychiatra
The effect of monocular lid suture is obvious in individual animals, because deprivation shrinks one eye's columns and expands the other's.
He noted that this contract curve was shrinking as the number of agents was growing, leading eventually to the competitive equilibrium.
As the opportunity value of continued existence shrinks, the corresponding duty fades to insignificance and eventually disappears altogether.
As shrinks further, the only interior equilibrium that still exists is nonmonetary, but it disappears as becomes sufficiently low.
As anticipated, the impact of costs shrinks as the plan grows larger but the effect differs by plan type.
In this case the implementations of functions use interval arithmetic and approximations to transcendental functions that get more accurate as the input interval shrinks.
Since usage counts can increase (by shrinking inlining or record selection) as well as decrease (by any shrinking rule), this might seem dangerous.
In the developed world, many enterprises increasingly operate in situations in which traditional assets, (physical and monetary) are of shrinking importance to business success.
中文繁体
變小, (使)縮小,(使)變小, 受驚嚇…
More中文简体
变小, (使)缩小,(使)变小, 受惊吓…
MoreEspañol
encoger(se), reducir(se), encogerse…
MorePortuguês
encolher, reduzir…
More日本語
縮む(縮める), 縮小する(させる)…
MoreTürk dili
daral(t)mak, çek(tir)mek, küçül(t)mek…
MoreFrançais
rétrécir, diminuer, se détourner…
MoreCatalan
encongir(-se), reduir(-se)…
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