Subsiding in a sentence as a noun

Sure its subsiding but i woukd not discount its importance.

Essentially it advocated subsiding mortgages instead of rent for the classes of people who can't do it on their own.

"The through of working till midnight in a warehouse while subsiding on pizza is somehow appealing to you.

My country is not subsiding another country's non-profits.

" peaked in March 2010 before subsiding, and that it's correlated with "hiv symptoms in women" and "how to get a guy to ask you out".Meanwhile, "why is my poop black?

Distribution costs include subsiding the Internet connection of Kindles for the life of the device.

So, in essence they gave them incentives to come to the city, and they also made it so they the old village system wouldn't work, stopped subsiding, redirected resources, etc.

We shouldn't just be subsiding it; we should be producing wind turbines and solar flat out like the US produced tanks and aircraft on automotive assembly lines during both world wars.

It seems after the initial collective euphoria the good karma is subsiding and people are are actually experiencing how the new Flickr page takes a month to load or so.

I'd agree it is up in the air about subsiding big sporting arenas etc. My city built a $600 million stadium not too long ago and raised taxes so that we could host the Super Bowl.

Currently valued at over $3 billion annually, the Mexican ******* market shows no signs of subsiding, and as long as such a high-valued market exists, violence will most likely follow.

Since your productivity goes to your bosses, but there are so many laborers looking for income, the ratio is that all labor roles can be filled by those already subsiding on other income sources, so the real value of labor is abysmal.

The mortgage interest deduction is subsiding those who make the choice to reduce their labor mobility; why would we subsidize people who want to reduce their competitiveness in the labor force?Hopefully the mortgage interest deduction will go the way of ethanol subsidies.

Hence there may be varied degrees of mass ****** in an ethnic cleansing, often subsiding when the target group appears to be leaving the desired territory, while during ******** the mass ****** is ubiquitous and constant throughout the process, continuing even while the target group tries to flee.

To be more efficient, you could lease rather than buy, but this doesn't change the underlying power balance: if production infrastructure is sufficiently cheap you can disintermediate the system for less than it would cost to be "financially independent" by subsiding on investment revenue.

Subsiding definitions

noun

a gradual sinking to a lower level

See also: settling subsidence