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[ UK /lˈæɡəd/ ]
[ US /ˈɫæɡɝd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. wasting time
NOUN
  1. someone who takes more time than necessary; someone who lags behind

How To Use laggard In A Sentence

  • UNABBREVIATED antimissile laggard SHORTENINGS (6) antirheu - lagger detox, v. matic, adj. meson gox antisexist, microelec - hydro adj. trode immuno -, audiotypist mu-meson comb. bioelectro - muon form genesis VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XVI No 1
  • The typical changeover takes 18 months to complete, so the pressure is now on laggards to get their house in order before the transition period runs out on December 31 next year.
  • Some key organizers think the AFL-CIO should still push laggard unions to organize more and help to coordinate more strategic, coordinated campaigns.
  • I'm going back to see if Jackoff called anybody a "blaggard" in past posts, because we know that the FIRST part of that "period" term means "Black" and has some serious racist overtones to it. City Council Stands Up To ACLU on Behalf of LAPD and The City
  • Without faster change, Italy is bound to fall further behind, becoming a potential drag on the already-depressed euro while former laggards such as Spain, Ireland, and Finland surge ahead.
  • Chris Huhne: You, prime minister, are a blaggard and a liar. David Cameron quotes Benny Hill song, but it's not the PM's greatest hit
  • UNABBREVIATED antimissile laggard SHORTENINGS (6) antirheu - lagger detox, v. matic, adj. meson gox antisexist, microelec - hydro adj. trode immuno -, audiotypist mu-meson comb. bioelectro - muon form genesis VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XVI No 1
  • Morris stayed busy enough in the daytime, shuttling between committee offices, the countinghouse, and the waterfront, where he harangued teams of seamen and stevedores—“I have scolded the officers like a gutter-whore,” he said of one laggard crew. Robert Morris
  • The point of reference for the laggard is the past. Diffusion of Innovations
  • There was no hint of the laggard now in Tom, Dick and Harry -- no suspicion of "staleness" in their keen pride in their work; Irish and Baldy of Nome
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