LOOSE vs SILTY: NOUN
- A letting go; discharge.
- Freedom from restraint.
- The mode of performing this act, which differs among different peoples.
- In archery: The act of releasing the bow-string and discharging the arrow.
- In mining, the end of a shift. Also loosing-time. When the workmen leave, the pit is said to be ‘loosed out.’
- In Rugby foot-ball, that part of the play in which the ball travels freely from player to player, as distinguished from the scrimmage.
- The privilege of turning out cattle on commons.
- A solution of a problem or explanation of a difficulty.
- The act of letting go or letting fly; discharge; shot.
- Freedom from restraint; license.
- N/A
LOOSE vs SILTY: ADJECTIVE
- Not literal
- Casual and unrestrained in sexual behavior
- Having escaped, especially from confinement
- Not taut, fixed, or rigid.
- Free from confinement or imprisonment; unfettered.
- Not tight-fitting or tightly fitted.
- Not bound, bundled, stapled, or gathered together.
- Not compact or dense in arrangement or structure.
- Not formal; relaxed.
- Not fastened, restrained, or contained.
- Emptying easily or excessively
- Not affixed
- Lacking a sense of restraint or responsibility
- Lacking conventional moral restraint in sexual behavior.
- Freely producing mucus
- Not restrained or confined or attached
- (of a ball in sport) not in the possession or control of any player
- Not compact or dense in structure or arrangement
- Not bound or fastened or gathered together
- Not tense or taut
- (of textures) full of small openings or gaps
- Not fixed firmly or tightly
- Not carefully arranged in a package
- Not officially recognized or controlled
- Not tight; not closely constrained or constricted or constricting
- Characterized by a free movement of fluids in the body.
- Not literal or exact.
- Full of silt; resembling silt.
- Full of silt
- Having a noticeable amount of silt.
LOOSE vs SILTY: VERB
- Make loose or looser
- Become loose or looser or less tight
- Turn loose or free from restraint
- Grant freedom to; free from confinement
- N/A
LOOSE vs SILTY: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To make less strict; relax.
- To release pressure or obligation from; absolve.
- To let fly; discharge.
- To cast loose; detach.
- To make loose; undo.
- To let loose; release.
- N/A
LOOSE vs SILTY: ADVERB
- In a loose manner.
- Without restraint
- N/A
LOOSE vs SILTY: OTHER WORD TYPES
- In archery, to release (the bowstring) after the bow is drawn, thus discharging the arrow.
- In chem., not combined with anything else: as, carbon dioxid loose in the blood. The word free is more commonly used in this sense.
- In geology, incoherent, as unconsolidated sands.
- In coal-mining, free at the ends or sides: applied to a working-place when the coal has been previously mined on both sides: as, loose at one end, loose at one side, etc.
- Not tight or close; without close union or adjustment; slightly or slackly joined: as, a loose knot; loose garments; a loose league or confederation.
- Not dense or compact; having interstices or intervals; open or expanded: as, cloth of loose texture; a loose order of battle.
- Not concise or condensed; wanting precision or connection of parts; diffuse; rambling: as, a loose style of writing; loose reasoning; a loose array of facts.
- Seemingly communicative; frank; open; candid.
- To make loose or free; release from that which restrains, confines, or hampers; set at liberty; disengage; discharge from constraint, obligation, or penalty.
- To disengage the hold of; undo; unfasten; untie.
- To relax; loosen; make or let loose, partially or wholly: as, to loose sail; to loose one's hold or grasp.
- Not fast or confined; not fastened; unattached; free from restraint or obligation; not bound to another or together; without bonds, ties, or attachments; at liberty: as, loose sheets of a book; loose tresses of hair; loose change in one's pocket; to break loose; to be set loose; to cut loose from bad habits.
- Synonyms To unfasten, let go, detach, disconnect, absolve, acquit.
- To perform the act of loosening; make or set loose something; let go a hold, unmoor a ship, shoot an arrow, or the like.
- Disengaged; free; independent: with from or of.
- Lax in principle or conduct; free from moral restraint; wanton; dissolute; unchaste: as, a loose woman; loose behavior.
- Grant freedom to
- Free from confinement
- Not tight
- Lax in character or quality; not strict or exact; careless; slovenly: as, a loose construction of the constitution; a loose mode of conducting business; loose morality.
- Lax; relaxed; slack; wanting retentiveness or power of restraint: as, loose bowels; loose ties; a loose bond of union.
- Not exact in meaning; indefinite; vague; uncertain.
- To solve; explain.
- (idiom) (on the loose) At large; free.
- (idiom) (on the loose) Acting in an uninhibited fashion.
- Consisting of or resembling silt; full of silt.
LOOSE vs SILTY: RELATED WORDS
- Escaped, Relax, Unbound, Easy, Friable, Free, Baggy, Promiscuous, Open, Unleash, Lax, Phlegmy, Unloose, Slack, Loosen
- Sedimentary rock, Sedimentation, Argillaceous, Siltstone, Streambed, Mud, Loess, Mudstone, Outwash, Claystone, Alluvium, Clayey, Sediment, Muddy, Loose
LOOSE vs SILTY: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Escaped, Relax, Unbound, Easy, Friable, Free, Baggy, Promiscuous, Open, Unleash, Lax, Phlegmy, Unloose, Slack, Loosen
- Sedimentary rock, Sedimentation, Argillaceous, Siltstone, Streambed, Mud, Loess, Mudstone, Outwash, Claystone, Alluvium, Clayey, Sediment, Muddy, Loose
LOOSE vs SILTY: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Do not attempt to catch the loose round.
- The red winged blackbird nests in loose colonies.
- Actually, the authority to bind and loose given to the other apostles was not the same authority given to Peter to bind and loose.
- Reviewable plays involving potential dead balls and loose balls Loose ball by a potential passer ruled a fumble.
- Mouthwash is used to kill bacteria as well as wash away any loose debris knocked loose by brushing or flossing.
- Remove loose mortar and clean off dust, dirt and loose cement.
- Tie the loose ends or leave them loose, according to the rule of your pack.
- The Loose Ends of Litigation Justice Stevens also identified a loose end that Schiavone leaves dangling.
- Preparation: Remove fins, burrs, sharp edges, weld spatter, loose rust and loose scale.
- Most computer users work with loose documents or loose sheets.
- Total and young organic carbon distributions in aggregates of silty cultivated soils.
- Heterogeneous unit ranging from very coarse sand with pebbles to silty clay.
- What options are available to cottagers with extremely silty lakebeds?
- Underneath the soil is a large amount of silty clay.
- Specimen size effects on direct shear test of silty sands.
- The soil is stupendous, a silty loam, really super stuff.
- Dust may include silty soils, fine sands and clays.
- The soils were coarse silty, carbonaceous, calcixerollic xerochrept.
- The geology of the area is composed of glacial tills, clayey or silty materials deposited by water, and silty materials deposited by wind.
- The diameter of silty, sandy, and clay soil from least to greatest is in the following order: clay, silty, and sandy.
LOOSE vs SILTY: QUESTIONS
- Does Malaysia have a loose attitude toward punctuality?
- What is meant by transportation of loose materials?
- What happens if your esophageal sphincter is loose?
- What happens if the compression socks become loose?
- Why does hyperthyroidism cause loose stools and diarrhea?
- What are some loose event contingency plan examples?
- What causes loose stools after gallbladder surgery?
- What is loose grain leather or loose grain leather?
- Was ist der Unterschied zwischen loose und on the Loose?
- Why do people wear loose-loose pants in hot weather?
- Is CD testing required for soil stability analysis of silty clay embankment?
- What are the two membrane processes used to treat silty river?
- Do cyclic liquefaction responses of silty and clean sands differ?