to remove the "play" from the steering wheel.
To 'cut you some slack' means to ease up on someone, lighten up, bend the rules, give you a break.
to speed up, to go for it
slack, loose
The meaning of "stuck up" is can't move in one place.
You are said to be a space cadet if all you do is take up space, contributing nothing of any use to anybody
The consequences of budgetary slack is that members of the team will spend more money in order to take up the slack. Management should set the budget with no slack.
No. Slack and taut are opposite in meaning.
the take-up lever i think
layer of Dacron added to the padding to take up some of the slack.
No good reason except maybe to take up some slack in the chains.
where the clutch pedal is there is a long bolt this is the adjuster turn clockwise to take up slack
slack adjuster is the adjuster on the brakes of vehicles with air brakes. these are used to adjust and take the slack out of the brakes caused by usual wear on the brakes
i think that its got something to do with the bowels ?
The root meaning of "lax" comes from the Latin word "laxus," which means loose or slack. It describes something that is not strict or rigid in its enforcement or application.
To 'cut you some slack' means to ease up on someone, lighten up, bend the rules, give you a break.
It is a person who "slack's off". AKA someone who does not "pick up the slack" or "carry their own weight" in a personal emotional or financial relationship. It is a person who "slack's off". AKA someone who does not "pick up the slack" or "carry their own weight" in a personal emotional or financial relationship.
Slack as in "lacking firmness" is an adjective. Slack as in the action "to slack" is a verb. Slack is also used as a noun to describe a part of a rope or a bog. A verb is a word that describes either an action (walk, run, etc), an occurrence (become, happen, etc) or state of being (stand, exist, etc).