slack off

VERB
  1. become less in amount or intensity
    The rain let up after a few hours
    The storm abated
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How To Use slack off In A Sentence

  • The ropes of the tent are too tight. Slack off a little!
  • Slack off your speed as you approach the corner.
  • One of the other writers is the same as me, so we formed an e-mail support group where we can give each other a hard time when we start to slack off. Why am I so honest? « Sven’s guide to…
  • As soon as you start to slack off, their satisfaction and motivation decreases.
  • As soon as you start to slack off, their satisfaction and motivation decreases.
  • The ropes of the tent are too tight. Slack off a little!
  • Railroads can boom, then bust, and then even be torn up; a frenzy of highway building can then follow, to slack off in its turn; copper wire can be laid for telephone service, then be replaced by fiber-optic cable (the latter often following railroad grades or highways!); a power distribution grid can be built at great expense, perhaps in turn to be "obsoleted" by cheap photovoltaics or fuel cells .... Who Do You Say I Am
  • Which of the tested ingredients, if any, caused the yeast to slack off, resulting in the unrisen bread?
  • Slack off your speed as you approach the corner.
  • Slack off those ropes there ; there's a storm coming!
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