Languid means lacking vitality or inactive, slow, and sluggish. Even with her languid stride, you could tell she had a purpose.
The lax security in the airport meant that people could bring otherwise non-allowed items onto the plane.
there is no such a sentences like lax this used for speech but there's no such a thing like that No lies Vishnu
the laxity of my bowles were upsetting.
You could write the sentence with the word torrent like this: I don't know how to use the word torrent in a sentence.
A sentence with the word 'grudgingly' in it could be 'i grudgingly shared my sweets with my brother'
A sentence with the word 'blew' could be 'I watched as the kite blew in the wind.'
I just used genre in a sentence.
i hate that word, likewise, i use it in this sentence
The class got away with murder because the teacher's discipline was lax. His muscles were lax in sleep.
Hi man ts'p
The pastor's chastisement was relatively lax.
His actions were a clear reflection of his moral depravity, as he went to great lengths to deceive and manipulate others for his own gain.
No, the word "lacks" is not used correctly in the sentence. The correct word should be "lax," which means lacking in strictness or care. So the corrected sentence would be: "Many of you have become lax and are consistently late."
adj: The Latin word for "lax" is "remissus"
The word 'lax' is an adjective. The noun forms are laxness or laxity.
Your question is itself a sentence which uses the word "could".
The root word 'LAX' means :not tense :D
"That is a HORRIBLE stench!" "The putrid shench i coming from the garbage can." "He ALWAYS has a bad stench after lax practice."
i think lase
You could write the sentence with the word torrent like this: I don't know how to use the word torrent in a sentence.