Sentences with wane
wane
W w - While his interest in these sports began to wane, a passion for rugby developed. [VERB]
- The moon was waning, and each day it rose later. [VERB]
- With decreased testosterone production, libido begins to wane, erectile problems start and overall endurance diminishes.
- Austrayan twang on the wane; Full text PM's Australia Day message.
- The day wanes
- Daylight waned, and night came on. Her enthusiasm for the cause is waning.
- It is natural for the passion in your marriage or relationship to wax and wane over the years.
- Symptoms can wax and wane over a period of time, which can complicate the veterinarians assessment of the response to treatment in some cases.
- Colonialism began to wane after World War II.
- Summer is waning.
- The era of film cameras was beginning to wane as early as 1988, when Fuji released the first truly digital camera.
- Wane implies a fading or weakening of that which has reached a peak of force, excellence, etc. [his fame waned rapidly]; abate suggests a progressive lessening in degree, intensity, etc. [the fever is abating]; ebb, applied specifically to a fluctuating force, refers to one of the periods of recession or decline [their ebbing fortunes]; subside suggests a quieting or slackening of violent activity or turbulence [her temper had subsided]
- The popularity of that song is on the wane.