Meaning of Slack | Babel Free
slækDefinitions
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A surname. countable, uncountable
- A temporary speed restriction where track maintenance or engineering work is being carried out at a particular place.
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A valley, or small, shallow dell; a sag or saddle in a ridge. countable
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Small coal; coal dust. uncountable
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The part of anything that hangs loose, having no strain upon it. uncountable
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A place in England: countable, uncountable
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A hamlet in Ashover parish, North East Derbyshire district, Derbyshire (OS grid ref SK3362). countable, uncountable
- A flat-bottomed, hollow zone within a sand-dune system that has developed over impervious strata, sometimes due to erosion or blow-out of the dune system; its flat base level is therefore close to or at the permanent water-table level, and therefore has rich, marshy flora, with Salix species (willows) as typical woody colonisers.
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A dip in a surface. countable, uncountable
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A hamlet in Heptonstall parish, Metropolitan Borough of Calderdale, West Yorkshire (OS grid ref SD9828). countable, uncountable
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In particular, a shallow dell or hollow; a dip in the surface of terrain, such as between hills. countable, uncountable
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A hamlet in the Metropolitan Borough of Kirklees, near Outlane, West Yorkshire (OS grid ref SE0817). countable, uncountable
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A low-lying marsh or a pool, especially a tidal or intermittent one which periodically fills and drains. countable
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A real-time collaboration app and platform launched in 2013. Internet, countable, uncountable
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Unconditional listening attention given by client to patient. uncountable
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Attributive form of slacks (“semi-formal trousers”). attributive, countable, form-of, uncountable
Equivalents
العربية
فترة الهدوء
Deutsch
(anstrengende) Arbeit scheuen
Flaute
lasch
lose
Marsch
schlaff
schlampig
Senke
Spiel
trödelig
Español
aflojar
aflojarse
charco
estar a la bartola
flojear
flojera
flojo
güevear
güevonear
holgado
huevear
huevonear
relajarse
soltura
suelto
Italiano
allentato
Latina
laxus
Polski
luz
Tagalog
lundo
Tiếng Việt
重
Examples
“the slack of a rope or of a sail”
“take in the slack”
“Richardson states that a low joint, a short distance from Haslam's Creek Bridge, was, in his opinion, the cause of the accident. […] [He] told Morgan, the Permanent Way Inspector, that there was a "slack" in the road on the Parramatta side of Haslam's Creek Bridge, […] I can positively state […] There was no such slack. The road was in as good running condition as I would wish to see any road. On all lines of course there are slacks, but not slacks of a serious nature; and that there was any such slack or depression in the rails as spoken of by Richardson I positively deny.”
“a road may be kept up to approximately the same level at all times, and a fair surface maintained by rolling in large patches occasionally, as well as opening slacks in the road when they appear and effecting petty repairs. […] a series of slacks will begin to show in the run of the wheels; or […]”
“[…] to make good the voids under the sleeper […] to take out "slacks" in the rail level […]”
“Cauldstane Slap, or rather Slack, is a much frequented pass, through which the periodical droves of black cattle are transported into England.”
“... for they had at that time observed the side of the brae, where the little green slack was situated, covered with a sheet of flame for a moment.”
“Then she became a gay grey mare, / And stood in yonder slack; And he became a gilt saddle, / And sat upon her back.”
“Not that every mountain stream springs from a tarn, but almost every tarn sends out a stream. Then, tarn-hunting teaches the relatively position of places almost as exactly as do the mountain-tops, leading by "backs," and "shoulders," and "slacks," and "feet," and over the lower heights straight to half a dozen seemingly irreconcilable districts[…]”
“The great interest of the sandhills is the slacks. They are more frequent in some parts than in others, for there are miles where the hollows are all sand and stargrass. But every here and there the hills have receded and formed a little flat valley, where there is something like soil, and where the rain lodges and the mosses grow. This is a "slack;" and in the Lancashire slacks may be found some of the most beautiful […] flowers.”
“The "slacks" I have mentioned are fresh-water pools which extend just inside the outer sandhills. Being mostly dry in summer, the shore fowl love to breed there. Peewits nest on their banks, and the long grasses and sand willow[…]”
“... in that quarter lay the great slack of the Watch Hill, the yellow slack that feeds the Blackburn, and in which horse and rider might readily disappear for ever.”
“Modern "moonpreneurs" now hijack tidal slacks to power server farms in Nova Scotia barns, mining Bitcoin during low tides when electricity costs crater.”
“The counselor is directed to give his client "free attention," or "slack," performing a kind of vigil, a version of Carl Rogers's "unconditional positive regard."”
“We have apparently been doing this all our lives, since we were first distressed. This collection of ancient habits seems to be "energized" by the presence, or even the promise, of "slack" or free attention from any person in the situation […]”
“The breeches formerly worn with those spiral leggings have been succeeded by full length, slack-type trousers which are loose at the knee and around the calf.”
“Recently though, slack manufacturers have been cuddling under the wings of the clothing industry to a greater extent than ever, for it has become good business to promote separate slacks and sport coats as a coordinated sales unit.”
“At that time, it was customary for male college students in Peking to wear long gowns. With a pair of slacks and leather shoes, plus a scarf in the winter, Shu looked very handsome. I tried to wear the gown for two days, and gave it up because I found it difficult to reach the slack pockets under it.”
“This pitfall, beginning in February and finishing in May, resulted in a drop of about 3 ft. in the platform level; during this period it was necessary to level the track three times weekly, and impose a service slack of 15 m.p.h. The subsidence appears now to have finished, and normal speed is once again permitted.”
“The train runs slowly with frequent slacks for bridge and culvert repairs. At one point occurs the changeover from left- to right-hand running.”
“A 40 m.p.h. slack at West Ruislip, quickly followed by a 30 m.p.h. slack at Gerrards Cross, increased our lateness to four minutes at High Wycombe.”
“Red Ringan sped, and the spearmen led, Up Goranberry Slack; Aye, many a wight, unmatched in fight, Who never more came back. And bloody set the westering sun, And bloody rose he up; […]”
“"I see some folk coming through the slack yonder, […]"”
“[…] southward, by the slack of the hill (2,500 feet), west of Ferrowie, (2,628 feet), on the County boundary, and descending by the Capel-burn to the South Esk,[…]”
“Sheelings : 1. Lies South of the Infields in a Slack betwixt two Hills 2. Lies at the South End of the Loch of Loch Beanoch […]”
“One of the important improvements of recent years has been attained by mixing the peat pulp as it passes through the grinding machine, with other inflammable materials, such as bituminous coal dust, or slack […]”
“It had rather a woolly and uneven beat and was inclined to prime, but there was no trouble with steaming even though the tender contained mostly small slack and dust.”
“On Slack, the employees of Strategic Programming chattered about metadata tagging issues.”
CEFR level
C1
Advanced
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.
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