slack

noun
/slæk/

Etymology

* As an English and Dutch surname, from the adjective slack. * Also as an English surname, from the noun slack (“shallow valley”). * Possibly also a Slovene surname Americanized from slak (“bindweed”), from Proto-Slavic *sъvolkъ. * The name of the software is an acronym of Searchable Log of All Conversation and Knowledge.

  1. inherited from *slakaz
  2. inherited from slæc — “slack
  3. inherited from slak

Definitions

  1. The part of anything that hangs loose, having no strain upon it.

    • the slack of a rope or of a sail
    • take in the slack
  2. A dip in a surface.

    • […] to make good the voids under the sleeper […] to take out "slacks" in the rail level […]
  3. In particular, a shallow dell or hollow

    In particular, a shallow dell or hollow; a dip in the surface of terrain, such as between hills.

    • Cauldstane Slap, or rather Slack, is a much frequented pass, through which the periodical droves of black cattle are transported into England.
    • ... for they had at that time observed the side of the brae, where the little green slack was situated, covered with a sheet of flame for a moment.
    • Then she became a gay grey mare, / And stood in yonder slack; And he became a gilt saddle, / And sat upon her back.
  4. + 23 more definitions
    1. A low-lying marsh or a pool, especially a tidal or intermittent one which periodically…

      A low-lying marsh or a pool, especially a tidal or intermittent one which periodically fills and drains.

      • The "slacks" I have mentioned are fresh-water pools which extend just inside the outer sandhills. Being mostly dry in summer, the shore fowl love to breed there. Peewits nest on their banks, and the long grasses and sand willow[…]
      • ... in that quarter lay the great slack of the Watch Hill, the yellow slack that feeds the Blackburn, and in which horse and rider might readily disappear for ever.
      • Modern "moonpreneurs" now hijack tidal slacks to power server farms in Nova Scotia barns, mining Bitcoin during low tides when electricity costs crater.
    2. Unconditional listening attention given by client to patient.

      • The counselor is directed to give his client "free attention," or "slack," performing a kind of vigil, a version of Carl Rogers's "unconditional positive regard."
    3. Attributive form of slacks (“semi-formal trousers”).

      • The breeches formerly worn with those spiral leggings have been succeeded by full length, slack-type trousers which are loose at the knee and around the calf.
      • Recently though, slack manufacturers have been cuddling under the wings of the clothing industry to a greater extent than ever, for it has become good business to promote separate slacks and sport coats as a coordinated sales unit.
    4. Lax

      Lax; not tense; not firmly extended.

      • a slack rope
    5. Weak

      Weak; not holding fast.

      • a slack hand
    6. Moderate in some capacity.

      • a slack oven
    7. Lacking diligence or care

      Lacking diligence or care; not earnest or eager.

      • slack in duty or service
      • The Lord is not ſlacke cõcerning his promiſe (as ſome men count ſlackneſſe)[…].
    8. Not active or busy, successful, or violent.

      • Business is slack.
      • the slack period following the main tourist season
      • “They know our boats will stand up to their work,” said Willison, “and that counts for a good deal. A low estimate from us doesn't mean scamped work, but just for that we want to keep the yard busy over a slack time.”
    9. Excess

      Excess; surplus to requirements.

      • the slack capacity of an oil pipeline
    10. Vulgar

      Vulgar; sexually explicit, especially in dancehall music.

    11. Lax.

    12. Slackly.

      • slack dried hops
      • Her clothes hung slack on her.
    13. To slacken.

      • In this business of growing rich, poor men […] should slack their pace.
    14. To mitigate

      To mitigate; to reduce the strength of.

      • Ne did ſhe let dull ſleepe once to relent, / Nor wearineſſe to ſlack her haſt, but fled / Euer alike,[…].
    15. To lose cohesion or solidity by a chemical combination with water

      To lose cohesion or solidity by a chemical combination with water; to slake.

      • Lime slacks.
    16. To refuse to work as hard as one is supposed to.

      • I can't afford to slack. This job is all I have!
    17. A temporary speed restriction where track maintenance or engineering work is being…

      A temporary speed restriction where track maintenance or engineering work is being carried out at a particular place.

      • The train runs slowly with frequent slacks for bridge and culvert repairs. At one point occurs the changeover from left- to right-hand running.
      • A 40 m.p.h. slack at West Ruislip, quickly followed by a 30 m.p.h. slack at Gerrards Cross, increased our lateness to four minutes at High Wycombe.
    18. A valley, or small, shallow dell

      A valley, or small, shallow dell; a sag or saddle in a ridge.

      • Red Ringan sped, and the spearmen led, Up Goranberry Slack; Aye, many a wight, unmatched in fight, Who never more came back. And bloody set the westering sun, And bloody rose he up; […]
      • "I see some folk coming through the slack yonder, […]"
      • […] southward, by the slack of the hill (2,500 feet), west of Ferrowie, (2,628 feet), on the County boundary, and descending by the Capel-burn to the South Esk,[…]
    19. A flat-bottomed, hollow zone within a sand-dune system that has developed over impervious…

      A flat-bottomed, hollow zone within a sand-dune system that has developed over impervious strata, sometimes due to erosion or blow-out of the dune system; its flat base level is therefore close to or at the permanent water-table level, and therefore has rich, marshy flora, with Salix species (willows) as typical woody colonisers.

    20. Small coal

      Small coal; coal dust.

      • One of the important improvements of recent years has been attained by mixing the peat pulp as it passes through the grinding machine, with other inflammable materials, such as bituminous coal dust, or slack […]
      • It had rather a woolly and uneven beat and was inclined to prime, but there was no trouble with steaming even though the tender contained mostly small slack and dust.
    21. A surname.

    22. A place in England

      A place in England:

    23. A real-time collaboration app and platform launched in 2013.

      • On Slack, the employees of Strategic Programming chattered about metadata tagging issues.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

A definitional loop anchored at slack. Each word in the ring is defined by the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself. Scroll to it and watch.

01slack02loose03unfasten04unloosed05unloose06slacken

A definitional loop anchored at slack. Each word in the ring appears in the definition of the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself.

6 hops · closes at slack

curated · pre-corpus. live cycle detection across the full graph is the next major milestone.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA