SLOW UP vs SLOW: NOUN
- N/A
- A Middle English spelling of slough.
- In zoöl, a sluggish or slow-paced skink, as the slow-worm or blindworm, Anguis fragilis; also, a newt or eft of like character.
- A moth.
- A sluggard.
- A Middle English preterit of slay.
SLOW UP vs SLOW: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- Marked by a retarded tempo.
- Taking or requiring a long time.
- Taking more time than is usual.
- Allowing movement or action only at a low speed.
- Registering a time or rate behind or below the correct one.
- Lacking in promptness or willingness; not precipitate.
- Characterized by a low volume of sales or transactions.
- Lacking liveliness or interest; boring.
- Not moving or able to move quickly; proceeding at a low speed.
- Not having or exhibiting intellectual or mental quickness.
- Only moderately warm; low.
- Slow to learn or understand; lacking intellectual acuity
- So lacking in interest as to cause mental weariness
- (of business) not active or brisk
- (used of timepieces) indicating a time earlier than the correct time
- A slow person. See def.7, above.
- Heavy in wit; not alert, prompt, or spirited; wearisome; dull.
- Not advancing or improving rapidly.
- Not ready; not prompt or quick; dilatory; sluggish.
- Not happening in a short time; gradual; late.
- Moving a short space in a relatively long time; not swift; not quick in motion; not rapid; moderate; deliberate.
- At a slow tempo
- Not moving quickly; taking a comparatively long time
SLOW UP vs SLOW: VERB
- Become slow or slower
- To slow, slow down, decelerate.
- Lose velocity; move more slowly
- Cause to proceed more slowly
- Become slow or slower
- Cause to proceed more slowly
- Lose velocity; move more slowly
SLOW UP vs SLOW: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To go slower; -- often with up.
- To make slow or slower.
- To delay; retard.
- To become slow or slower.
SLOW UP vs SLOW: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To render slow; to slacken the speed of; to retard; to delay.
SLOW UP vs SLOW: ADVERB
- N/A
- Without speed (`slow' is sometimes used informally for `slowly')
- Of timepieces
- At a low speed.
- So as to fall behind the correct time or rate.
SLOW UP vs SLOW: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Move more slowly
- Lose velocity
- Heavy, inert, lumpish.
- 3 and
- Synonyms Delaying, lingering, deliberate.
- Dull; lacking spirit; deficient in liveliness or briskness: used of persons or things: as, the entertainment was very slow.
- Behind in time; indicating a time earlier than the true time: as, the clock or watch is slow.
- Not hasty; not precipitate; acting with deliberation.
- Tardy; dilatory; sluggish; slothful.
- 1–4. Slow, Tardy, Dilatory. Slow and tardy represent either a fact in external events or an element of character; dilatory only the latter. Dilatory expresses that disposition or habit by which one is once or generally slow to go about what ought to be done. See idle.
- Not happening in a short time; spread over a comparatively long time; gradual: as, a slow change; the slow growth of arts.
- Taking a long time to move or go a short distance; not quick in motion; not rapid: as, a slow train; a slow messenger.
- To slacken in speed: as, to slow a locomotive or a steamer: usually with up or down.
- To make slow; delay; retard.
- To become slow; slacken in speed.
- Slowly.
- Not ready; not prompt or quick; used absolutely, not quick to comprehend; dull-witted.
- Not moving quickly
- Move more slowly
- Lose velocity
- Showing a time that is earlier than the actual time
- Slow to learn or understand
- Taking a comparatively long time
- Lacking intellectual acuity
- (imperative) Slew.
SLOW UP vs SLOW: RELATED WORDS
- Slowback, Speedless, Foreslow, Ease up, Tardation, Sloomy, Allargando, Larghissimo, Lentitude, Slow down, Retard, Decelerate, Slacken, Slack, Slow
- Dim, Easy, Dragging, Dull, Lazy, Dilatory, Slack, Tedious, Poky, Retard, Dawdling, Slacken, Decelerate, Slowly, Sluggish
SLOW UP vs SLOW: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Slowback, Speedless, Foreslow, Ease up, Tardation, Sloomy, Allargando, Larghissimo, Lentitude, Slow down, Retard, Decelerate, Slacken, Slack, Slow
- Boring, Dim, Easy, Dragging, Dull, Lazy, Dilatory, Slack, Tedious, Poky, Retard, Slacken, Decelerate, Slowly, Sluggish
SLOW UP vs SLOW: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Through the course of isotonic cardiac workouts, a spasm may likely slow up the drive important for contraction.
- Starting to slow up and do a less charters this time of year, but we have still been doing some fishing.
- If it is about the engine, then slow up your speed and check if something happens.
- You can slow up the process of the pearls absorbing acid from your skin.
- Or, you may say that this business of marking books is going to slow up your reading.
- Tags where the main door, arcane attribute requirement is fairly slow up to create an attack.
- Thus they leap over obstacles that would slow up a human being, too thick!
- The thought is the idea is if you clean up the edges, you helpfully arrest or slow up the degenerative process.
- The horses continually showed a disposition to slow up.
- At best, too many cooks slow up a broth.
- This may indicate that the server is slow to respond, the network is slow, or that there is some other network problem.
- Experiencing a SLOW network connection: Are other office members are experiencing slow network access.
- This is very helpful on systems with slow closing valves or on pump systems that are operating near maximum flow or have slow wellrecovery.
- The slow cooker setting is great for meals that have a cook time already set for a slow cooking meal.
- Really slow to respond after handing in draft, very slow edits, and final version looked nothing like the edited version we worked on together.
- Lid on the slow cooker tin of chickpeas to make it chunkier this website you will lentil and potato curry slow cooker for.
- Every man must be swift about hearing, slow about speaking, slow about wrath.
- Expect slow transfer rates, primarily by reason of the slow network cards, the computer itself, and the storage.
- Slow drivers slow everyone down and asshole drivers increase the slowdown by cutting people off.
- In testing web applications, test with slow machines and slow networks that more closely mimic those of real users.
SLOW UP vs SLOW: QUESTIONS
- N/A
- What are some Chinese-inspired slow cooker recipes?
- Can antioxidants slow the progression of vision loss?
- How is slow-transit constipation (STC) characterized?
- Does exercise slow Parkinson's disease progression?
- Can Xtandi slow advanced prostate cancer progression?
- Can cryptographic hash functions slow down motorcycles?
- Does uninstalling programs slow down your computer?
- How does enterogastrone slow down stomach emptying?
- Is Slow Food and slow living the answer to green living?
- Can I access slow lounge and slow international with my FNB card?