WEAK vs SLACK: NOUN
- N/A
- Feeble, foolish talk.
- Plural A sailor's loose trousers.
- The interval of slack water, when the tide is at rest, either at high or low tide; sluggishness of the current, at that time See slack, adjective, 2.
- A morass.
- A common.
- An opening between hills; a hollow where no water runs.
- A sloping hillside.
- The finer screenings of coal; coal-dirt; especially, the dirt of bituminous coal.
- A bog; a morass.
- A small dell or hollow.
- A mixture of coal fragments, coal dust, and dirt that remains after screening coal.
- Casual pants that are not part of a suit.
- Unused capacity.
- An area of still water.
- A cessation of movement in a current of air or water.
- A period of little activity; a lull.
- A loose part, as of a rope or sail.
- A noticeable deterioration in performance or quality
- Dust consisting of a mixture of small coal fragments and coal dust and dirt that sifts out when coal is passed over a sieve
- A stretch of water without current or movement
- The condition of being loose (not taut)
- A cord or rope or cable that is hanging loosely
WEAK vs SLACK: ADJECTIVE
- Not possessing or manifesting intellectual, logical, moral, or political strength, vigor, etc.
- Lacking ability for an appropriate function or office.
- Not thoroughly or abundantly impregnated with the usual or required ingredients, or with stimulating and nourishing substances; of less than the usual strength.
- Lacking force of utterance or sound; not sonorous; low; small; feeble; faint.
- Not able to resist external force or onset; easily subdued or overcome.
- Not stiff; pliant; frail; soft.
- Not firmly united or adhesive; easily broken or separated into pieces; not compact.
- Not able to sustain a great weight, pressure, or strain.
- Deficient in strength of body; feeble; infirm; sickly; debilitated; enfeebled; exhausted.
- Wanting physical strength.
- Designating a verse ending in which the metrical stress falls on a word or syllable that is unstressed in normal speech, such as a preposition.
- Unstressed or unaccented in pronunciation or poetic meter. Used of a word or syllable.
- Of, relating to, or being the inflection of nouns or adjectives in Germanic languages with a declensional suffix that historically contained an n.
- Of, relating to, or being those verbs in Germanic languages that form a past tense and past participle by means of a dental suffix, as start, started; have, had; bring, brought.
- Lacking authority or the power to govern.
- Lacking persuasiveness; unconvincing.
- Lacking aptitude or skill.
- Lacking or resulting from a lack of intelligence.
- Unable to digest food easily; readily nauseated.
- Lacking the ability to function normally or fully.
- Having low prices or few transactions.
- Lacking the proper strength or amount of ingredients.
- Lacking intensity or strength; faint.
- Lacking firmness of character or strength of will.
- Likely to fail under pressure, stress, or strain; lacking resistance.
- Lacking physical strength, energy, or vigor; feeble.
- Lacking physical strength or vitality
- Having the attributes of man as opposed to e.g. divine beings
- Lacking force; feeble
- Overly diluted; thin and insipid
- Used of vowels or syllables; pronounced with little or no stress
- Characterized by excessive softness or self-indulgence
- Lacking power
- Having little physical or spiritual strength
- Used of verbs having standard (or regular) inflection
- Lacking physical strength or vigor
- Pronounced with the muscles of the tongue and jaw relatively relaxed; lax.
- Flowing or blowing with little speed.
- Lacking in diligence or due care or concern; negligent: : negligent.
- Moving slowly; sluggish.
- Lacking in activity; not busy.
- Not tense or taut; loose: : loose.
- Lacking in strength or firmness or resilience
- Lacking in rigor or strictness
- Not tense or taut
- Flowing with little speed as e.g. at the turning of the tide
WEAK vs SLACK: VERB
- To make or become weak; to weaken.
- Become slow or slower
- Become less in amount or intensity
- Make less active or intense
- Be inattentive to, or neglect
- Release tension on
- Make less active or fast
- Avoid responsibilities and work, be idle
- Cause to heat and crumble by treatment with water
WEAK vs SLACK: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To be inactive or avoid work.
- To be or become slack.
- To slake (lime).
- To be careless or remiss in doing.
- To make slower.
- To make looser or less taut.
WEAK vs SLACK: ADVERB
- N/A
- In a slack manner.
WEAK vs SLACK: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Barely perceptible
- Deficient in magnitude
- Wanting in moral strength, courage, or will
- Thin and insipid
- Overly diluted
- Deficient in intelligence or mental power
- Likely to fail under stress or pressure
- Deficient in magnitude; barely perceptible; lacking clarity or brightness or loudness etc
- Not having authority, political strength, or governing power
- Lacking bodily or muscular strength or vitality
- Deficient or lacking in some skill
- Tending downward in price
- Wanting in physical strength
- Tending downward in price: as, a weak market; corn was weak.
- Poorly supplied; deficient: as, a hand weak in trumps.
- As a noun or an adjective, with less full or original differences of case-and number-forms: opposed to strong (which see).
- (I) In grammar, infiected— as a verb, by regular syllabic addition instead of by change of the radical vowel;
- Slight; inconsiderable; trifling.
- Resulting from or indicating lack of judgment, discernment, or firmness; arising from want of moral courage, of self-denial, or of determination; injudicious: as, a weak compliance; a weak surrender.
- Deficient in pith, pregnancy, or point; lacking in vigor of expression: as, a weak sentence; a weak style.
- Not abundantly or sufficiently impregnated with the essential, required, or usual ingredients, or with stimulating or nourishing substances or properties; not of the usual strength: as, weak tea; weak broth; a weak infusion; weak punch.
- Deficient in force of utterance or sound; having little volume, loudness, or sonorousness; low; feeble; small.
- Incapable of support; not to be sustained or maintained: unsupported by truth, reason, or justice: as, a weak claim, assertion, argument, etc.
- Unequal to a particular need or emergency; ineffectual or inefficacious; inadequate or unsatisfactory; incapable; impotent.
- Lacking mental power, ability, or balance; simple; silly; foolish.
- Lacking moral strength or firmness; liable to waver or succumb when urged or tempted; deficient in steady principle or in force of character.
- Deficient in bodily strength, vigor, or robustness; feeble, either constitutionally or from age, disease, etc.; infirm; of the organs of the body, deficient in functional energy, activity, or the like: as, a weak stomach; weak eyes.
- Lacking strength; not strong.
- Bending under pressure, weight, or force; pliant, or pliable; yielding; lacking stiffness or firmness: as, the weak stem of a plant.
- To become weak.
- To soften.
- To make weak; weaken.
- The quality of being loose (not taut)
- A soft wet area of low-lying land that sinks underfoot
- Slow in movement; tardy.
- To retard the speed of, as a railway-train.
- To cool in water.
- To slake (lime). See slake, transitive verb, 3.
- To make remiss or neglectful.
- To be remiss in or neglectful of; neglect.
- To make less intense, violent, severe, rapid, etc.; abate; moderate; diminish; hence, to mitigate; relieve.
- To relax; let go the hold of; lose or let slip.
- To make slack or less tense; loosen; relax: as, to slack a rope or a bandage.
- To make slack or slow; retard.
- To become languid; languish; fail; flag.
- To abate; become less violent.
- To become less tense, firm, or rigid; decrease in tension.
- To become slack or slow; slacken; become slower: as, a current of water slacks.
- (idiom) (cut/give) To make an allowance for (someone), as in allowing more time to finish something.
WEAK vs SLACK: RELATED WORDS
- Flimsy, Debilitated, Frail, Vulnerable, Lax, Slack, Flaccid, Anaemic, Tenuous, Thin, Fragile, Soft, Feeble, Weakened, Anemic
- Slow down, Standing, Let up, Slake, Abate, Negligent, Flaccid, Limp, Slump, Falloff, Lax, Slow, Loose, Slacken, Weak
WEAK vs SLACK: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Flimsy, Debilitated, Frail, Vulnerable, Lax, Slack, Flaccid, Anaemic, Tenuous, Thin, Fragile, Soft, Feeble, Weakened, Anemic
- Drop off, Slow down, Standing, Let up, Abate, Negligent, Flaccid, Limp, Slump, Falloff, Lax, Slow, Loose, Slacken, Weak
WEAK vs SLACK: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- The weak weak Consecutive sensor the same due to the mean amongthese frames.
- Weak acids are not often titrated against weak bases, however, because the color change is brief and therefore very difficult to observe.
- Choose any of the weak symbols if given multiple weak symbols.
- Obama administration appointee who is weak on borders and very weak on illegal immigration.
- Our initial tests of this thesis found only a weak relationship, but we also were limited by weak measures.
- Major issues you should be worried about here are weak password policies and a weak user registration process.
- The reverse reaction however is far too weak to deprotonate such a weak acid as NH.
- Meaning: One weak part will render the complete weak.
- Weak on prayer, weak on Bible study, weak on Ministries.
- To the weak I have become weak, so as to gain the weak.
- We are updating our Slack app for alerting to support Granular Bot Permissions in Slack.
- Slack Incoming Webhook, you will also be notified on Slack when deployments succeed or fail.
- Slack Node SDK, full support for Webhook and the Slack API, continuously updated.
- Slack lets you import Google Drive files and share them via Slack.
- Slack manipulation indicates how a manager builds up and uses slack.
- You created a Slack app for connecting Fuse Online to Slack.
- And investors refuse to cut Slack any slack.
- Slack integration record associated with a particular Slack workspace.
- John SLACK, a minor, by and through his mother and next friend, Estelle Slack, and Estelle Slack, Individually, Respondents.
- Asana updates that come into Slack, and even turn Slack messages into Asana tasks or comments without leaving Slack.
WEAK vs SLACK: QUESTIONS
- When does weak sequencing reduce to a parallelmerge?
- How to secure Active Directory from weak passwords?
- Is Doubleshot pro recommended for weak wireless signals?
- Does Geant4 multi-threaded support weak reproducibility?
- Can weak partitioning chromatography purify monoclonal antibodies?
- Are Windows Defender credential passwords still weak?
- Why do hydrocarbons have weak intermolecular forces?
- Does weak foundationalism imply coherence justification?
- Why is Objectivism weak everywhere physical reality is weak?
- Does web storage suffer from weak integrity and weak confidentiality issues?
- How does Zendesk ticket notification work in slack?
- Does slack capacity matter in emerging market economies?
- Which Slack integrations are still being used today?
- How does slack support international data transfers?
- Should slack be used synchronously or asynchronous?
- What influences budgetary slack building behaviour?
- How to use slack achievers for Slack to boost recognition?
- How do I listen in on slack channels using slack-IRC?
- Does the slack app directory Slack integration work with Datadog?
- Who are Rachael slack's siblings Hayden and Melony slack?