le-pes

English: Translation
the state or condition of being deflated, contracted, or reduced in size or volume, often referring to objects (such as a tire, balloon, or container) that have lost internal pressure, or to living beings (such as a person or animal) that have become thinner or lighter due to loss of mass, fluid, or vitality.
Notes

see: kerepes

        botog

As the direct antonym of botog (Sense 1 only), lepes describes a general, often reversible collapse from fullness to slackness—e.g., a tire going flat, a balloon losing air, or a body slimming after diet or exertion. It carries no implication of desiccation or brittleness (those qualities fall under kerepes) and never applies to unstable ground (botog Sense 2). The change may be temporary and restorable; the form remains soft and pliant, not shriveled or crisp.