diminutive

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
16
Words With Friends
20
Letters
10
Pronunciation
/dɪˈmɪn.jə.tɪv/
See all 4 pronunciations
/dɪˈmɪn.jə.tɪv/ · /dəˈmən.jə.təv/ · /ɖɪˈmɪn.ju.tɪv/ · /dɪˈmɪn.ju.ə.tɪv/

Definition of diminutive

5 senses · 2 parts of speech · etymology included

adj

  1. Very small.
    “Mrs. Washington ("Oh, la, call me Martha, Boys") is a diminutive woman with a cheerful rather than happy air, who seems to bustle even when standing still..”
    “Roman Sharonov rose unchallenged to head a corner wide, while diminutive winger Gokdeniz Karadeniz ghosted in with a diving header from the edge of the six-yard box that was acrobatically kept out by Gomes.”
See all 5 definitions

adj

  1. Very small.
    “Mrs. Washington ("Oh, la, call me Martha, Boys") is a diminutive woman with a cheerful rather than happy air, who seems to bustle even when standing still..”
    “Roman Sharonov rose unchallenged to head a corner wide, while diminutive winger Gokdeniz Karadeniz ghosted in with a diving header from the edge of the six-yard box that was acrobatically kept out by Gomes.”
  2. (obsolete)Serving to diminish.
    “1711, Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury, Characteristicks of Men, Manners, Opinions, Times, 1714 edition republished by Gregg International Publishers, 1968, Volume 3, Miscellany 3, Chapter 2, p. 175, They cou’d, perhaps, even embrace POVERTY contentedly, rather than submit to any thing diminutive either of their inward Freedom or national Liberty.”
  3. Of or pertaining to, or creating a word form expressing smallness, youth, unimportance, or endearment.

noun

  1. A word form expressing smallness, youth, unimportance, or endearment.
    “Booklet, the diminutive of book, means ‘small book’.”
    “But I was frightfully fond of the universe and wanted to address it by a diminutive. I often did so; and it never seemed to mind.”
    “When we come to occupative names, we are again confronted by crowds of diminutives.”
    “The British use the term “fidlets”, a diminutive of “Fid”, which in turn is an acronym for Falkland Island Dependencies, the former name of the British Antarctic Survey.”
  2. The smallest, thinnest version of a traditional heraldic ordinary ("geometric shape on a shield"), often used to represent multiple instances of a charge or to modify a main, central, and larger charge; not itself modifiable.

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

Inherited from Middle English diminutif, derived from Old French diminutif, derived from Latin dīminutīv|us, ~a, ~um (adjective), from dīminūt|us, ~a, ~um (participle), perfect passive participle of dīmin|uō, ~uere, ~uī, ~ūtum (verb). First attested in 1398.

Words you can make from diminutive

155 playable · top: MUTINIED (11 pts)

Best play mutinied 11 points

7-letter words

5 words

6-letter words

14 words

5-letter words

27 words

4-letter words

52 words

3-letter words

38 words

2-letter words

18 words

Hooks

1 extension · 1 back

A single letter you can add to diminutive to make another valid word.

Find your best play with diminutive

See every word you can make from a set of letters that includes diminutive, or browse word lists you can mine for high-scoring plays.