Laxative vs Lax - What's the difference?
laxative | lax |
Having the effect of moving the bowels, or aiding digestion and preventing constipation.
Any substance, such as a food or in the form of a medicine which has a laxative effect.
A salmon.
lenient and allowing for deviation; not strict.
* J. A. Symonds
loose; not tight or taut.
* Ray
lacking care; neglectful, negligent
* {{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=October 1
, author=Phil Dawkes
, title=Sunderland 2 - 2 West Brom
, work=BBC Sport
(archaic) Having a looseness of the bowels; diarrheal.
lacrosse
----
As an adjective laxative
is having the effect of moving the bowels, or aiding digestion and preventing constipation.As a noun laxative
is any substance, such as a food or in the form of a medicine which has a laxative effect.laxative
English
(wikipedia laxative)Adjective
(en adjective)See also
*Noun
(en noun)See also
*Coordinate terms
* (l) — urination ----lax
English
Alternative forms
* (Killian)Etymology 1
From (etyl) lax, from (etyl) .Noun
(laxes)Etymology 2
From (etyl)Adjective
(er)- The rules are fairly lax , but you have to know which ones you can bend.
- Society at that epoch was lenient, if not lax , in matters of the passions.
- The rope fell lax .
- the flesh of that sort of fish being lax and spongy
citation, page= , passage=Prior to this match, Albion had only scored three league goals all season, but Wes Brown's lax marking allowed Morrison to head in their fourth from a Chris Brunt free-kick and then, a minute later, the initial squandering of possession and Michael Turner's lack of pace let Long run through to slot in another.}}