to cause to descend; let or put down: to lower a flag.
to make lower in height or level: to lower the water in a canal.
to reduce in amount, price, degree, force, etc.
to make less loud: Please lower your voice.
to bring down in rank or estimation; degrade; humble; abase (oneself&hasp;), as by some sacrifice of self-respect or dignity: His bad actions lowered him in my eyes.
to make lower in pitch; flatten.
to alter the articulation of (a vowel) by increasing the distance of the tongue downward from the palate:(ä) in the British pronunciation. The vowel of “clerk” is lowered to
—v.i.
to become lower, grow less, or diminish, as in amount, intensity, or degree: The brook lowers in early summer. Stock prices rise and lower constantly.
to descend; sink: the sun lowering in the west.
—adj.
comparative of.
of or pertaining to those portions of a river farthest from the source.
(often cap.) Stratig. noting an early division of a period, system, or the like: the Lower Devonian.