slack


slack (http://definr.com/slack)

     adj 1: not tense or taut; "the old man's skin hung loose and gray";
            "slack and wrinkled skin"; "slack sails"; "a slack
            rope" [syn: loose]
     2: lacking in strength or firmness or resilience; "flaccid
        muscles"; "took his lax hand in hers"; "gave a limp
        handshake"; "a limp gesture as if waving away all desire
        to know" G.K.Chesterton; "a slack grip" [syn: flaccid, lax,
         limp]
     3: flowing with little speed as e.g. at the turning of the
        tide; "slack water"
     4: lacking in rigor or strictness; "such lax and slipshod ways
        are no longer acceptable"; "lax in attending classes";
        "slack in maintaining discipline" [syn: lax]
     n 1: a noticeable decline in performance: "the team went into a
          slump"; "a sudden slack in output"; "a drop-off in
          attendance"; "a falloff in automobile sales" [syn: slump,
           drop-off, falloff, falling off]
     2: a stretch of water without current or movement; "suddenly
        they were in slack water"
     3: the condition of being loose (not taut); "he hadn't counted
        on the slackness of the rope" [syn: slackness]
     4: a cord or rope or cable that is hanging loosely; "he took of
        the slack"
     v 1: avoid responsibilities and work, be idle
     2: be inattentive to, or neglect, as of duties: "He slacks his
        attention"
     3: release tension on; "slack the rope"
     4: make less active or fast; "He slackened his pace as he got
        tired" [syn: slacken, slack up]
     5: become slow or slower; "Production slowed" [syn: slow, {slow
        down}, slow up, slacken]
     6: make less active or intense [syn: slake, abate]
     7: become less in amount or intensity; "The storm abated" [syn:
         abate, let up, slack off, die away]
     8: cause to heat and crumble by treatment with water, as of
        lime [syn: slake]