noun, plural dwarfs, dwarves, adjective, verb | 1. | a person of abnormally small stature owing to a pathological condition, esp. one suffering from cretinism or some other disease that produces disproportion or deformation of features and limbs. |
| 2. | an animal or plant much smaller than the average of its kind or species. |
| 3. | (in folklore) a being in the form of a small, often misshapen and ugly, man, usually having magic powers. |
| 4. | Astronomy. dwarf star. |
| 5. | of unusually small stature or size; diminutive. |
| 6. | to cause to appear or seem small in size, extent, character, etc., as by being much larger or better: He dwarfed all his rivals in athletic ability. |
| 7. | to make dwarf or dwarfish; prevent the due development of. |
| 8. | to become stunted or smaller. |

| any of the ordinary main sequence stars, as those of spectral types O, B, A, F, G, K, and M. |
Dwarf
A name given to a pool of mortgage-backed securities, issued by Fannie Mae, with a maturity of 15 years.
Investopedia Commentary
Fannie Mae is short for Federal National Mortgage Association.
See also: Fannie Mae, Maturity Date, Mortgage Backed Security
dwarf (dwôrf)
n. pl. dwarfs or dwarves (dwôrvz)
An abnormally small person, often having limbs and features not properly proportioned or formed.
dwarf (dwôrf) Pronunciation Key
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| dwarf star
A relatively small, low-mass star that emits an average or below-average amount of light. Most dwarf stars, including the Sun, are main-sequence stars, the principal exception being white dwarfs, which are the remnants of larger collapsed stars. Main-sequence dwarfs burn their hydrogen at a much slower rate than giant and supergiant stars and are consequently less luminous and have longer lifespans than those non-main-sequence stars do. Our Living Language : Despite their diminutive name, most dwarf stars are quite normal main-sequence stars and come in a wide variety of sizes, formed from protostars with sufficient mass to begin the process of nuclear fusion. But there are other stellar and quasistellar objects called dwarf stars as well. Brown dwarfs are formed when insufficient mass accretes for nuclear fusion to take place; brown dwarfs thus never become proper stars. Other kinds of dwarf stars result from the further evolution of main-sequence stars not massive enough to become neutron stars or black holes (which form from the burned-out core of a supernova). The type known as a white dwarf is the remnant of a red giant star that has burned nearly all its fuel. The mutual gravitational attraction of its atoms, no longer counterbalanced by the outward pressure of burning fuel within, causes the star to collapse in on itself. After it contracts and blows its outer layers away as a planetary nebula, the red giant stabilizes as a white dwarf and slowly fades. Our Sun is of a size and mass that will probably cause it to evolve first into a small red giant and eventually into a white dwarf. Red dwarfs have a lower mass and luminosity than white dwarfs, and black dwarfs, if any yet exist, are even less luminous, no longer giving off any detectable radiation. |
Dwarf
a lean or emaciated person (Lev. 21:20).