lag|lagged|lagging|lags in English
verb
fall behind, fail to keep up with the established pace, straggle; develop slowly; linger, tarry; slacken, flag, weaken; imprison (British Slang); insulate (from heat)
Use "lag|lagged|lagging|lags" in a sentence
1. 4.1.3.4 LAGs carried by passengers may be exempted from screening if the LAG is:
2. 27 If they are not already lagged, lag the cold water tank and pipes in the loft space.
3. Second, monetary policy suffers shorter inside lags and outside lags than fiscal policy.
4. Astrid lags with three!
5. The lame child lagged behind.
6. Any who lagged behind were whipped.
7. Jet lag.
8. Higher education lagging behind
9. Composition of Local Action Groups (LAGs)
10. Those who lagged behind or fell were shot.
11. But consumption has lagged behind overall economic expansion.
12. Overcoming Jet Lag
13. Administrative follow-up lags far behind (34).
14. He lagged behind in the race.
15. We've had the hot-water tank lagged.
16. Modify relation time lag
17. In Autocorrelations View, the series chart plots autocorrelation coefficients at different lags for the selected series (three greatest lags are plotted with darker bars); seasonality is indicated by strong lags at certain time periods
18. The quality of education lags behind access
19. However, implementation lagged behind after the 2009 financial crisis.
20. She was jet-lagged, anxious and sick with bulimia.
21. Sales are lagging at the moment.
22. Deny Rocket Lag.
23. Calculating lagged differences with the Backshift operator
24. The child lagged because he was tired.
25. Conversely, lagging advances in knowledge by scientists, engineers and other professionals will mean lagging wages for basic workers."