Diminution in a sentence as a noun

He could also translate it at no diminution in speed from its original language into English.

I was wondering if it was diminution based on gender but if they're doing it for everyone, that makes it more interesting.

Unfortunately, "girl" conveys a sort of latent, sexist diminution, such that the phrase "Product Girl" is dismissive.

But if the more important problem is diminution of student capacity / capability for the work, better teaching helps only so much.

I wonder if the evolution of this will lead to decentralization and eventual diminution of today's usurpers?

The software industry has worked pretty much the way you describe as long as I've been a part of it, and I haven't noticed any sort of diminution of status for software engineers.

It's just baby steps toward something which could represent a diminution in individual liberty every bit as severe and oppressive as full-on tyranny.

Additionally, they should not need any external validation of their success, and somebody else's diminution of their standard of success is oppressive.

Drug legalization laws should definitely have police force reduction measures, whether that's a direct population-ratio requirement or just a diminution of funds.

"I want to say, in all seriousness, that a great deal of harm is being done in the modern world by belief in the virtuousness of work, and that the road to happiness and prosperity lies in an organized diminution of work.

The advantage of osteopathic manipulative medicine was a diminution of adverse drug reactions while the disadvantage was the greater amount of physician time required for each patient.

"In 2006, Princeton economist Alan Blinder famously warned that the critical economic divide in the future will 'be between those types of work that are easily deliverable through a wire or via wireless connections with little or no diminution in quality, and those that are not.'”

> When push comes to shove, what Buffet really wants -- and what you are > advocating when you say that no matter how much money he donates, it > "will not be enough to solve our budget issues" -- is an increase in the > size of government fueled by higher taxes, rather than a diminution of > its scope by reducing the funds made available to it.

Diminution definitions

noun

change toward something smaller or lower

See also: decline

noun

the statement of a theme in notes of lesser duration (usually half the length of the original)

noun

the act of decreasing or reducing something

See also: decrease reduction step-down