Laxity


[lak-si-tee] /ˈlæk sɪ ti/

noun
1.
the state or quality of being ; looseness.
n.

1520s, from Middle French laxité, from Latin laxitatem (nominative laxitas) “width, spaciousness,” from laxus (see lax).

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  • Laxly

    [laks] /læks/ adjective, laxer, laxest. 1. not strict or severe; careless or negligent: lax morals; a lax attitude toward discipline. 2. loose or slack; not tense, rigid, or firm: a lax rope; a lax handshake. 3. not rigidly exact or precise; vague: lax ideas. 4. open, loose, or not retentive, as diarrheal bowels. 5. (of […]

  • Laxness

    [lahks-nes] /ˈlɑks nɛs/ noun 1. Halldór Kiljan [hahl-dohr kil-yahn] /ˈhɑl doʊr ˈkɪl yɑn/ (Show IPA), 1902–98, Icelandic writer: Nobel Prize 1955. /ˈlaxsnɛs/ noun 1. Halldór (Kiljan) (haldəʊr). 1902–98, Icelandic novelist, noted for his treatment of rural working life in Iceland. His works include Salka Valka (1932) and Independent People (1935). Nobel prize for literature 1955

  • Lay

    [ley] /leɪ/ verb (used with object), laid, laying. 1. to put or place in a horizontal position or position of rest; set down: to lay a book on a desk. 2. to knock or beat down, as from an erect position; strike or throw to the ground: One punch laid him low. 3. to put […]

  • Lay a batch

    verb phrase To leave black rubber marks on the road by accelerating a car rapidly (1940s+ Teenagers)

  • Layabout

    [ley-uh-bout] /ˈleɪ əˌbaʊt/ noun, Chiefly British. 1. a lazy or idle person; loafer. /ˈleɪəˌbaʊt/ noun 1. a lazy person; loafer verb 2. (preposition, usually intransitive or reflexive) (old-fashioned) to hit out with violent and repeated blows in all directions n. “habitual loafer,” 1932, from lay (v.) + about. One who “lays about” the house, etc. […]


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