Use "slacken|slackened|slackening|slackens" in a sentence

1. Slacken braces.

2. 21 The sail ropes slackened.

3. She slackened her pace a little .

4. At about five o'clock, business slackened off.

5. Having slackened and loose skin after loosing pounds fantastically?

6. The pace never slackens, the action just keeps accelerating.

7. 18 According to the survey, overall world trade has also slackened.

8. Slacken your legs and slowly lie back.

9. Inflationary pressures continued to slacken last month.

10. We're on the last lap, so don't slacken!

11. The pace did not slacken in the fifth.

12. His grip slackened a little and she pulled away.

13. Machinery slackened; throbbing feebly like a fainting pulse; stopped.

14. 7 His grip slackened a little and she pulled away.

15. But it should slacken when the leash is held normally.

16. Slacken the reins or you'll hurt the horse's mouth.

17. Don't allow the reins to slacken, keep them taut.

18. Have I slackened mine hand, that I have not nourished it?

19. But his secret life was contracting as East/West tensions slackened.

20. The management expects demand to slacken in the New Year.

21. Workers can be trained to do other tasks when sales slacken.

22. The pilots cautiously relaxed their grip and let their muscles slacken.

23. The Conservative government will not slacken the pace of radical reform.

24. After hours of digging, we began to slacken up a little.

25. During World War I, there came opposition, testing and sifting, and a slackening of their activities.

26. Melanie hung onto it as life line, straining , pulling it taut, slackening it, tearing it.

27. Synonyms for Bating include ebbing, lessening, waning, aBating, moderating, slackening, lapsing, easing, checking and curbing

28. Synonyms for Bated include ebbed, lessened, waned, aBated, moderated, slackened, lapsed, eased, checked and curbed

29. Upper-level winds gradually slackened, allowing Lane to regain Category 4 intensity late on August 20.

30. Slacken the chocolate mixture with one-third of them then fold in the rest.

31. But soon he had to slacken, for Nora made no attempt to match his pace.

32. Better have no war for a thousand days than slacken your vigilance for one day.

33. The way to change the phases of slacken production, inexpedient circulation is to realize the limited austerity.

34. If this is the case, slacken the rod by small increments until the buzz goes.

35. Contrarily, despondency, or a lethargic state of mind, causes the movement of the blood to slacken

36. But in the last pages Chailly slackens the pulse again, and instead of an ending to exhilarate and thrill we have anticlimax.

37. 14 synonyms for Bate: aBate, die, ease, ebb, fall, fall off, lapse, let up, moderate, remit, slacken, slack

38. I tried to slacken pace but the slowest I went seemed to be faster than I had ever run before.

39. Although normally dry and leeward, the traditional easterly (to northeasterly) tradewinds slacken and reverse during one of these cyclones.

40. The tight ranks wavered and melted before the driving spearhead, even though it was now sadly deformed and its speed slackened.

41. I was warned again and again by friendly police officers of some rank to slacken the pace: and I refused.

42. Only after the second death on that mild, sunny Saturday eight days ago did the pace of planes and people slacken.

43. This line is then pulled down to pull the Backstays together (and tension them) or slides up to allow the Backstays to separate (and follow a more direct line) thus slackening them.

44. Any life which circulates in the hule under the influence of the third fence is called Mahadna and Samkaia , but his best - known name is Riuha His work is destruction and annihilation , like nature in the last stages of activity , when its power slackens .

45. By activation of pull means (ring 17) the tube tip may be made to tilt in the curvature plane of the tube in order to be inserted into aditus laryngis under auscultatory-tactile control and further through glottis onwards to trachea upon gradually slackening the pull via the ring.

46. Amidmost of the summertide To search the dwellings of the deer Until the heat of noon was near; Then slackening speed awhile they went Adown a ragged thorn-bushed bent At whose feet grew a tangled wood Of oak and holly nowise good: But therethrough with some pain indeed And rending of the ladies' weed They won at last, and after found