"lax" appears to come from the verb form "to be relaxed (about something/in general)". So you could say "He is/I am lax", but you can't say "he is laxing" as in "relaxing".
Yes, I can help you relax. Take a few deep breaths, find a comfortable position, and close your eyes. Focus on relaxing each part of your body, starting from your toes and working your way up to your head. Let go of any tension or stress you may be holding onto.
The noun forms of the adjective 'lax' are laxity and laxness.
'Lax' is an adjective and so it doesn't have a past tense.
Tense and lax refer to the muscular tension in the vocal cords when producing speech sounds. Tense vowels have more muscular tension and are produced with a longer duration, while lax vowels have less tension and a shorter duration. English contrasts tense and lax vowels, such as in the pairs /iː/ (tense) and /ɪ/ (lax).
No, "lax" is not a noun. It is primarily an adjective that means not strict or severe.
It's lacks, from lack, which means the opposite of possess.
The class got away with murder because the teacher's discipline was lax. His muscles were lax in sleep.
LAX
You can obtain a map for Lax at the following websites...www.lawa.org LAX Parking or www.airportterminalmaps.com/LAX-street-map.html I hope this helps.
Henrik Lax's birth name is Rolf Henrik Richard Lax.
Yes
Lax refers to a slackness in enforcing rules.
the best lax team Syracuse
John Lax was born in 1911.
Petteri Lax was born in 1985.
Robert Lax died in 2000.
Melvin Lax was born in 1922.
Melvin Lax died in 2002.