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lax

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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See also: LAX and Lax

Translingual

Etymology

Clipping of English Lalung with x as a placeholder.

Symbol

lax

  1. (international standards) ISO 639-3 language code for Tiwa.

See also

English

Pronunciation

Alternative forms

Etymology 1

    From Middle English lax, from Old English leax (salmon), from Proto-West Germanic *lahs (salmon), from Proto-Germanic *lahsaz (salmon), from Proto-Indo-European *laḱs- (salmon, trout). Cognate with Middle Dutch lacks, lachs, lasche (salmon), Middle Low German las (salmon), German Lachs (salmon), Norwegian laks (salmon), Danish laks (salmon), Swedish lax (salmon), Icelandic lax (salmon), Lithuanian lašišà (salmon), Latvian lasis, Russian лосо́сь (losósʹ, salmon), Albanian leshterik (eel-grass). Doublet of lox.

    Noun

    lax (plural laxes)

    1. (now chiefly UK dialectal, Scotland) A salmon.
    Derived terms

    Etymology 2

      Borrowed from Latin laxus (wide, roomy, loose).

      Adjective

      lax (comparative laxer, superlative laxest)

      1. Lenient and allowing for deviation; not strict.
        The rules are fairly lax, but you have to know which ones you can bend.
        • 1886, John Addington Symonds, Philip Sidney:
          Society at that epoch was lenient, if not lax, in matters of the passions.
      2. Loose; not tight or taut.
        The rope fell lax.
        • 1701, John Ray, The Wisdom of God Manifested in the Works of the Creation, [], 3rd edition, London: [] Sam[uel] Smith, and Benj[amin] Walford, [], →OCLC, part II, page 355:
          The Fleſh of this ſort of [cartilaginous] Fiſh being lax and ſpungy, and nothing ſo firm, ſolid and weighty as that of the bony Fiſhes, and there being a good quantity of Air contained in the Cavity of their Abdomen, they cannot ſink in the Water without letting in ſome of it by theſe Holes (the Orifices whereof are opened and ſhut at pleaſure by the help of Muſcles provided for that purpoſe) into the hollow of their Bellies, whereby they preponderate the Water and deſcend; []
        • 1979, “Genetical Studies on Dense and Lax Panicles In Rice”, in Japan. J. Breed., volume 29, number 2, page 151:
          Sreedharan and Mirsa (1973) reported that two lax panicle mutants, designated as nude panicle mutation, were obtained from the M2 of two rice cultivars.
      3. Lacking care; neglectful, negligent.
        • 1956 September, “Notes and News: The Barby Sidings Accident Report”, in Railway Magazine, page 638:
          The guard was paying no attention whatever to the running of his train, in total disregard of rules, and, as the recently-published report of a Ministry of Transport Inspecting Officer of Railways shows, there were other disquieting features in the case, such as ignorance on the part of responsible men of rules and appendix instructions and a lax attitude to regulations of which they professed to be aware, combined with failure to look at staff notice boards.
        • 2011 October 1, Phil Dawkes, “Sunderland 2 – 2 West Brom”, in BBC Sport:
          Prior to this match, Albion had only scored three league goals all season, but Wes Brown's lax marking allowed Morrison to head in their fourth from a Chris Brunt free-kick and then, a minute later, the initial squandering of possession and Michael Turner's lack of pace let Long run through to slot in another.
      4. (mathematics) Describing an associative monoidal functor.
      5. (archaic) Having a looseness of the bowels; diarrheal.
      6. (linguistics) (of a vowel) Produced with relatively little constriction of the vocal tract.
        Antonym: tense
      Synonyms
      Antonyms
      • (antonym(s) of lenient, not strict): strict
      • (antonym(s) of loose, not tight): taut, tight
      Derived terms
      Translations

      Etymology 3

      By replacement of the syllable crosse with the cross-shaped letter x.

      Noun

      lax (uncountable)

      1. (slang) lacrosse.
        • 2010, Kate Kingsley, Pretty on the Outside, page 79:
          “I'm not playing lax this term,” Mimah said.
      Derived terms

      Etymology 4

      Noun

      lax (plural laxes)

      1. (informal) Clipping of laxative.

      Anagrams

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      Ahtna

      Stem

      lax

      1. Verbal stem occurring in the following root, aspect, and mode combinations:
      More information Aspect, Imperfective ...

      Azerbaijani

      Etymology

      Borrowed from Classical Persian لق.

      Adjective

      lax (comparative daha lax, superlative ən lax)

      1. shaky, unsteady, rickety, wobbly
      2. loose, spacious, loose-fitting
      3. rotten (of eggs)
        lax yumurtarotten egg
      4. (Baku, Salyan) untruthful
      5. (Gadabay, Nakhchivan, Ordubad) meaningless

      Derived terms

      Further reading

      • lax” in Obastan.com.

      Catalan

      Etymology

      Learned borrowing from Latin laxus.

      Pronunciation

      Adjective

      lax (feminine laxa, masculine plural laxos, feminine plural laxes)

      1. loose, lax, slack
        Synonym: fluix
        Antonym: tens

      Further reading

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      Dacian

      Noun

      lax

      1. The edible wild purslane plant.

      German

      Etymology

      Borrowed from Latin laxus.

      Pronunciation

      Adjective

      lax (strong nominative masculine singular laxer, comparative laxer, superlative am laxesten)

      1. lax
      2. (morale or ethics) easy, loose

      Declension

      Further reading

      • lax” in Duden online
      • lax” in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache
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      Icelandic

      Etymology

      From Old Norse lax, from Proto-Germanic *lahsaz.

      Pronunciation

      Noun

      lax m (genitive singular lax, nominative plural laxar)

      1. salmon

      Declension

      More information singular, plural ...

      Derived terms

      • laxbleikur:
      • laxbleikur litur m
      • stinglax m
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      Latin

      Middle English

      Old Norse

      Old Swedish

      Romanian

      Swedish

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