Not compact, Not fitting closely, Relaxed, Indiscreet, Not being in the possession of any competing team during a game, Free from moral restraint; immoral, unchaste, Not held or packaged together, Not fixed in place tightly or firmly, To unfasten, to loosen, To let loose, to free from restraints, To make less tight, to loosen, Of a grip or hold, to let go, to shoot (an arrow), The release of an arrow, Not under control, A state of laxity or indulgence; unrestrained freedom, abandonment, Common misspelling of lose, begin shooting; release your arrows, laus, Unconnected; rambling, Dissolute; unchaste; as, a loose man or woman, Not strict in matters of morality; not rigid according to some standard of right, Not precise or exact; vague; indeterminate; as, a loose style, or way of reasoning, Unbound; untied; unsewed; not attached, fastened, fixed, or confined; as, the loose sheets of a book, Not dense, close, compact, or crowded; as, a cloth of loose texture, Lax; not costive; having lax bowels, Free from constraint or obligation; not bound by duty, habit, etc, To solve; to interpret, not bound or fastened or gathered together; "loose pages"; "loose papers", To relax; to loosen; to make less strict, To release from anything obligatory or burdensome; to disengage; hence, to absolve; to remit, A letting go; discharge, To untie or unbind; to free from any fastening; to remove the shackles or fastenings of; to set free; to relieve, Containing or consisting of obscene or unchaste language; as, a loose epistle, A strategy which involves playing many hands, A player who plays many hands, To set sail, promiscuous, Not tight or close; as, a loose garment, Not bound or tethered or leashed, with from or of, Freedom from restraint, lacking a sense of restraint or responsibility; "idle talk"; "a loose tongue", having escaped, especially from confinement; "a convict still at large"; "searching for two escaped prisoners"; "dogs loose on the streets"; "criminals on the loose in the neighborhood", not affixed; "the stamp came loose", emptying easily or excessively; "loose bowels", not officially recognized or controlled; "an informal agreement"; "a loose organization of the local farmers", not literal; "a loose interpretation of what she had been told"; "a free translation of the poem", not compact or dense in structure or arrangement; "loose gravel", Playing loose simply means playing more hands and holding on to them longer In essence, loose with your cash A loose table is a table dominated (so to speak) by loose players Loose isn't always bad - excessively tight play can be equally costly, especially at high levels of play Looseness should not be confused with aggressiveness A loose call is a borderline inadvisable or even incorrect call He was playing so loose, it seemed like he was in every pot, A car is loose when the rear is unstable because of improper rear tire grip Also known as oversteer MARBLES: Small pieces of tire rubber that build up above the racing groove, A board is loose when it feels "alive" on the water and responds well to foot pressure As a general rule a loose board is lightweight, the text block is coming loose from the binding at the hinges, Basically, a handling condition describing the tendency of a car's rear wheels to break away from the pavement, swinging its rear end toward the outside wall Also called "oversteer", A condition where the front tires have more traction than the rear tires This produces the effect where the rear of a racecar wants to exchange positions with the front of the racecar, or the rear end wants to go towards the outer wall This condition is also known as "Oversteer" and may be hard to control A car that is loose is faster than a car that is tight, without restraint; "cows in India are running loose", become loose or looser or less tight; "The noose loosened"; "the rope relaxed", Clothes that are loose are rather large and do not fit closely. Wear loose clothes as they're more comfortable. = baggy tight + loosely loose·ly His shirt hung loosely over his thin shoulders, If your hair is loose, it hangs freely round your shoulders and is not tied back. She was still in her nightdress, with her hair hanging loose over her shoulders, If people or animals break loose or are set loose, they are no longer held, tied, or kept somewhere and can move around freely. She broke loose from his embrace and crossed to the window Why didn't you tell me she'd been set loose? = free, Something that is loose is not attached to anything, or held or contained in anything. Frank emptied a handful of loose change on the table A page came loose and floated onto the tiles, in a loose manner, Something that is loose is not firmly held or fixed in place. If a tooth feels very loose, your dentist may recommend that it's taken out Two wooden beams had come loose from the ceiling She idly pulled at a loose thread on her skirt. + loosely loose·ly Tim clasped his hands together and held them loosely in front of his belly, If something is loose in texture, there is space between the different particles or threads it consists of. She gathered loose soil and let it filter slowly through her fingers, A loose grouping, arrangement, or organization is flexible rather than strictly controlled or organized. Murray and Alison came to some sort of loose arrangement before he went home He wants a loose coalition of leftwing forces. + loosely loose·ly The investigation had aimed at a loosely organised group of criminals, turn loose or free from restraint; "let loose mines"; "Loose terrible plagues upon humanity", make loose or looser; "loosen the tension on a rope", grant freedom to; free from confinement, a loose cannon: see cannon all hell breaks loose: see hell, If a person or an animal is on the loose, they are free because they have escaped from a person or place. Up to a thousand prisoners may be on the loose inside the jail, As in: "The kart is loose" Another name for oversteer, casual and unrestrained in sexual behavior; "her easy virtue"; "he was told to avoid loose (or light) women"; "wanton behavior", (of a ball in sport) not in the possession or control of any player; "a loose ball", Having a tile loose Not quite of sound mind The head being the roof of the temple called the body Out on the loose Out on the spree; out of moral bounds, (of textures) full of small openings or gaps; "an open texture"; "a loose weave", free, let go, release; make loose; untie, unfasten; shoot (arrow, gun, etc.), A soil consistence term See also consistence, free; released; untied; disconnected; slack; weak; not tight; unrestrained; wanton; careless; imprecise; not defined, not restrained or confined or attached; "a pocket full of loose bills"; "knocked the ball loose"; "got loose from his attacker", not tight; not closely constrained or constricted or constricting; "loose clothing"; "the large shoes were very loose", not bound or fastened or gathered together; "loose pages"; "loose papers" not compact or dense in structure or arrangement; "loose gravel" (of a ball in sport) not in the possession or control of any player; "a loose ball" not restrained or confined or attached; "a pocket full of loose bills"; "knocked the ball loose"; "got loose from his attacker" freely producing mucus; "a loose phlegmy cough" not tight; not closely constrained or constricted or constricting; "loose clothing"; "the large shoes were very loose" not carefully arranged in a package; "a box of loose nails" not fixed firmly or tightly; "the bolts became loose over time"; "a loose chair leg"; "loose bricks" (of textures) full of small openings or gaps; "an open texture"; "a loose weave" not tense or taut; "the old man's skin hung loose and gray"; "slack and wrinkled skin"; "slack sails"; "a slack rope" without restraint; "cows in India are running loose, without restraint; "cows in India are running loose, not carefully arranged in a package; "a box of loose nails", not fixed firmly or tightly; "the bolts became loose over time"; "a loose chair leg"; "loose bricks", freely producing mucus; "a loose phlegmy cough", Free; not held, tied up or fastened, Loose item may or maynot include accessories, Slang: freewheeling; unfettered; tending to overbid or to bid dangerously, (B) freewheeling; unfettered; tending to overbid or to bid dangerously, Too much steering A loose car turns too far and is hard to control, Stock car drivers say a car is loose if on the turns, the rear end heads toward the wall Open-wheel drivers would say the car is oversteering A loose car is faster than a tight car, not tight or confined, as in: Someone left the gate open and my dog got loose, Also known as "oversteer", a car is said to be loose if the rear wheels lose traction with the pavement before the front wheels do This causes the car to fishtail as the rear end swings outward during turns, Noncoherent when dry or moist; does not hold together in a mass, Without packing, - The loose view is characterized by those who claim to be pre-tribulational futurists but often take prophecy written for Israel and suggest that it is being fulfilled today, during the church age This viewpoint holds that sometimes prophecy relating to the tribulation is being or has already been fulfilled in the current church age This is a weak, inconsistent application of futurism, since it commingles God's plan for Israel with His plan for the church at specific points of prophetic fulfillment This view is not in keeping with the dispensational tradition of separating Israel and the Church, Term to describe a condition in which the car's front tires have more traction than the rear, causing the rear of the car to point toward the outside and the front to point to the inside Also called "oversteer ", leaves the most visible space between characters and produces a longer string, A term used to describe product that is no longer in its original packaging, not tense or taut; "the old man's skin hung loose and gray"; "slack and wrinkled skin"; "slack sails"; "a slack rope", To let go of the bowstring at full draw, ideally by relaxation of the fingers holding the bow string, Approximately, Not tightly, Moral laxity; licentiousness, A relaxed state regarding principles or accuracy, The quality or fact of being free from rigidity, attachment or restraint; not tight, not firmly attached or taut, Common misspelling of loser, Comparative form of loose: more loose, Praise; fame; reputation, Austrian architect (1870-1933), plural of, past of loose, knitted in a loose manner; "loosely knit" in a relaxed manner; not rigid; "his hands lay loosely" in a loose manner; "a union of loosely federated states, knitted in a loose manner; "loosely knit", in a loose manner; "a union of loosely federated states", in a relaxed manner; not rigid; "his hands lay loosely", without regard to specific details or exceptions; "he interprets the law broadly", in a loose manner; "a union of loosely federated states, in a loose manner; in a relaxed manner; freely; broadly, generally; immorally; in an unrestrained manner, The property of being loose, state of being loose; absence of rigidity or strictness; slackness, laxity, movement or space for movement; "there was too much play in the steering wheel", movement or space for movement; "there was too much play in the steering wheel, The state, condition, or quality, of being loose; as, the looseness of a cord; looseness of style; looseness of morals or of principles, form of loose,
65
Not compact - "It is difficult walking on loose gravel"
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66
Not fitting closely - "I wear loose clothes when it is hot"
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67
Relaxed - "She danced with a loose flowing movement"
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68
Indiscreet - "Loose talk costs lives"
ts
69
Not being in the possession of any competing team during a game - "The puck was momentarily loose right in front of the net."
ts
70
Free from moral restraint; immoral, unchaste - "In all these he was much and deeply read; / But not a page of any thing that 's loose, / Or hints continuation of the species, / Was ever suffer'd, lest he should grow vicious."
ts
71
Not held or packaged together - "You can buy apples in a pack, but they are cheaper loose"
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72
Not fixed in place tightly or firmly - "This wheelbarrow has a loose wheel"
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73
To unfasten, to loosen
ts
74
To let loose, to free from restraints
ts
75
To make less tight, to loosen
ts
76
Of a grip or hold, to let go
ts
77
to shoot (an arrow)
ts
78
The release of an arrow
ts
79
Not under control - "The dog is loose again"
ts
80
A state of laxity or indulgence; unrestrained freedom, abandonment
ts
81
Common misspelling of lose - "I'm going to loose this game."
ts
82
begin shooting; release your arrows
ts
83
laus
ts
84
Unconnected; rambling
ts
85
Dissolute; unchaste; as, a loose man or woman
ts
86
Not strict in matters of morality; not rigid according to some standard of right
ts
87
Not precise or exact; vague; indeterminate; as, a loose style, or way of reasoning
ts
88
Unbound; untied; unsewed; not attached, fastened, fixed, or confined; as, the loose sheets of a book
ts
89
Not dense, close, compact, or crowded; as, a cloth of loose texture
ts
90
Lax; not costive; having lax bowels
ts
91
Free from constraint or obligation; not bound by duty, habit, etc
ts
92
To solve; to interpret
ts
93
not bound or fastened or gathered together; "loose pages"; "loose papers"
ts
94
To relax; to loosen; to make less strict
ts
95
To release from anything obligatory or burdensome; to disengage; hence, to absolve; to remit
ts
96
A letting go; discharge
ts
97
To untie or unbind; to free from any fastening; to remove the shackles or fastenings of; to set free; to relieve
ts
98
Containing or consisting of obscene or unchaste language; as, a loose epistle
ts
99
A strategy which involves playing many hands
ts
100
A player who plays many hands
ts
101
To set sail
ts
102
promiscuous
ts
103
Not tight or close; as, a loose garment
ts
104
Not bound or tethered or leashed
ts
105
with from or of
ts
106
Freedom from restraint
ts
107
lacking a sense of restraint or responsibility; "idle talk"; "a loose tongue"
ts
108
having escaped, especially from confinement; "a convict still at large"; "searching for two escaped prisoners"; "dogs loose on the streets"; "criminals on the loose in the neighborhood"
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109
not affixed; "the stamp came loose"
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110
emptying easily or excessively; "loose bowels"
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111
not officially recognized or controlled; "an informal agreement"; "a loose organization of the local farmers"
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112
not literal; "a loose interpretation of what she had been told"; "a free translation of the poem"
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113
not compact or dense in structure or arrangement; "loose gravel"
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114
Playing loose simply means playing more hands and holding on to them longer In essence, loose with your cash A loose table is a table dominated (so to speak) by loose players Loose isn't always bad - excessively tight play can be equally costly, especially at high levels of play Looseness should not be confused with aggressiveness A loose call is a borderline inadvisable or even incorrect call He was playing so loose, it seemed like he was in every pot
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115
A car is loose when the rear is unstable because of improper rear tire grip Also known as oversteer MARBLES: Small pieces of tire rubber that build up above the racing groove
ts
116
A board is loose when it feels "alive" on the water and responds well to foot pressure As a general rule a loose board is lightweight
ts
117
the text block is coming loose from the binding at the hinges
ts
118
Basically, a handling condition describing the tendency of a car's rear wheels to break away from the pavement, swinging its rear end toward the outside wall Also called "oversteer"
ts
119
A condition where the front tires have more traction than the rear tires This produces the effect where the rear of a racecar wants to exchange positions with the front of the racecar, or the rear end wants to go towards the outer wall This condition is also known as "Oversteer" and may be hard to control A car that is loose is faster than a car that is tight
ts
120
without restraint; "cows in India are running loose"
ts
121
become loose or looser or less tight; "The noose loosened"; "the rope relaxed"
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122
Clothes that are loose are rather large and do not fit closely. Wear loose clothes as they're more comfortable. = baggy tight + loosely loose·ly His shirt hung loosely over his thin shoulders
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If your hair is loose, it hangs freely round your shoulders and is not tied back. She was still in her nightdress, with her hair hanging loose over her shoulders
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124
If people or animals break loose or are set loose, they are no longer held, tied, or kept somewhere and can move around freely. She broke loose from his embrace and crossed to the window Why didn't you tell me she'd been set loose? = free
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Something that is loose is not attached to anything, or held or contained in anything. Frank emptied a handful of loose change on the table A page came loose and floated onto the tiles
ts
126
in a loose manner
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127
Something that is loose is not firmly held or fixed in place. If a tooth feels very loose, your dentist may recommend that it's taken out Two wooden beams had come loose from the ceiling She idly pulled at a loose thread on her skirt. + loosely loose·ly Tim clasped his hands together and held them loosely in front of his belly
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128
If something is loose in texture, there is space between the different particles or threads it consists of. She gathered loose soil and let it filter slowly through her fingers
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129
A loose grouping, arrangement, or organization is flexible rather than strictly controlled or organized. Murray and Alison came to some sort of loose arrangement before he went home He wants a loose coalition of leftwing forces. + loosely loose·ly The investigation had aimed at a loosely organised group of criminals
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130
turn loose or free from restraint; "let loose mines"; "Loose terrible plagues upon humanity"
ts
131
make loose or looser; "loosen the tension on a rope"
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132
grant freedom to; free from confinement
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133
a loose cannon: see cannon all hell breaks loose: see hell
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If a person or an animal is on the loose, they are free because they have escaped from a person or place. Up to a thousand prisoners may be on the loose inside the jail
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As in: "The kart is loose" Another name for oversteer
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casual and unrestrained in sexual behavior; "her easy virtue"; "he was told to avoid loose (or light) women"; "wanton behavior"
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(of a ball in sport) not in the possession or control of any player; "a loose ball"
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138
Having a tile loose Not quite of sound mind The head being the roof of the temple called the body Out on the loose Out on the spree; out of moral bounds
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(of textures) full of small openings or gaps; "an open texture"; "a loose weave"
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140
free, let go, release; make loose; untie, unfasten; shoot (arrow, gun, etc.) fiil
ts
141
A soil consistence term See also consistence
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142
free; released; untied; disconnected; slack; weak; not tight; unrestrained; wanton; careless; imprecise; not defined sıfat
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143
not restrained or confined or attached; "a pocket full of loose bills"; "knocked the ball loose"; "got loose from his attacker"
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144
not tight; not closely constrained or constricted or constricting; "loose clothing"; "the large shoes were very loose"
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145
not bound or fastened or gathered together; "loose pages"; "loose papers" not compact or dense in structure or arrangement; "loose gravel" (of a ball in sport) not in the possession or control of any player; "a loose ball" not restrained or confined or attached; "a pocket full of loose bills"; "knocked the ball loose"; "got loose from his attacker" freely producing mucus; "a loose phlegmy cough" not tight; not closely constrained or constricted or constricting; "loose clothing"; "the large shoes were very loose" not carefully arranged in a package; "a box of loose nails" not fixed firmly or tightly; "the bolts became loose over time"; "a loose chair leg"; "loose bricks" (of textures) full of small openings or gaps; "an open texture"; "a loose weave" not tense or taut; "the old man's skin hung loose and gray"; "slack and wrinkled skin"; "slack sails"; "a slack rope" without restraint; "cows in India are running loose
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146
without restraint; "cows in India are running loose
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147
not carefully arranged in a package; "a box of loose nails"
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148
not fixed firmly or tightly; "the bolts became loose over time"; "a loose chair leg"; "loose bricks"
ts
149
freely producing mucus; "a loose phlegmy cough"
ts
150
Free; not held, tied up or fastened
ts
151
Loose item may or maynot include accessories
ts
152
Slang: freewheeling; unfettered; tending to overbid or to bid dangerously
ts
153
(B) freewheeling; unfettered; tending to overbid or to bid dangerously
ts
154
Too much steering A loose car turns too far and is hard to control
ts
155
Stock car drivers say a car is loose if on the turns, the rear end heads toward the wall Open-wheel drivers would say the car is oversteering A loose car is faster than a tight car
ts
156
not tight or confined, as in: Someone left the gate open and my dog got loose
ts
157
Also known as "oversteer", a car is said to be loose if the rear wheels lose traction with the pavement before the front wheels do This causes the car to fishtail as the rear end swings outward during turns
ts
158
Noncoherent when dry or moist; does not hold together in a mass
ts
159
Without packing
ts
160
- The loose view is characterized by those who claim to be pre-tribulational futurists but often take prophecy written for Israel and suggest that it is being fulfilled today, during the church age This viewpoint holds that sometimes prophecy relating to the tribulation is being or has already been fulfilled in the current church age This is a weak, inconsistent application of futurism, since it commingles God's plan for Israel with His plan for the church at specific points of prophetic fulfillment This view is not in keeping with the dispensational tradition of separating Israel and the Church
ts
161
Term to describe a condition in which the car's front tires have more traction than the rear, causing the rear of the car to point toward the outside and the front to point to the inside Also called "oversteer "
ts
162
leaves the most visible space between characters and produces a longer string
ts
163
A term used to describe product that is no longer in its original packaging
ts
164
not tense or taut; "the old man's skin hung loose and gray"; "slack and wrinkled skin"; "slack sails"; "a slack rope"
ts
165
To let go of the bowstring at full draw, ideally by relaxation of the fingers holding the bow string
ts
166
loosely
Approximately - "It's red, to use the term loosely, sort of brown and sort of orange, let's call it reddish."
ts
167
loosely
Not tightly - "Insert all the bolts loosely, then tighten them."
ts
168
looseness
Moral laxity; licentiousness - "Yet goodly court he made still to his Dame, / Pourd out in loosnesse on the grassy grownd ."
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169
looseness
A relaxed state regarding principles or accuracy
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170
looseness
The quality or fact of being free from rigidity, attachment or restraint; not tight, not firmly attached or taut - "See if that nut has too much looseness and tighten it if it does."
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171
looser
Common misspelling of loser
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172
looser
Comparative form of loose: more loose - "You should make this garment looser."
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173
loos
Praise; fame; reputation
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174
loos
Austrian architect (1870-1933)
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175
loos
plural of
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176
loosed
past of loose
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177
loosely
knitted in a loose manner; "loosely knit" in a relaxed manner; not rigid; "his hands lay loosely" in a loose manner; "a union of loosely federated states
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178
loosely
knitted in a loose manner; "loosely knit"
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179
loosely
in a loose manner; "a union of loosely federated states"
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180
loosely
in a relaxed manner; not rigid; "his hands lay loosely"
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181
loosely
without regard to specific details or exceptions; "he interprets the law broadly"
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182
loosely
in a loose manner; "a union of loosely federated states
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183
loosely
in a loose manner; in a relaxed manner; freely; broadly, generally; immorally; in an unrestrained manner
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184
looseness
The property of being loose
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185
looseness
state of being loose; absence of rigidity or strictness; slackness, laxity isim
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186
looseness
movement or space for movement; "there was too much play in the steering wheel"
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187
looseness
movement or space for movement; "there was too much play in the steering wheel
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188
looseness
The state, condition, or quality, of being loose; as, the looseness of a cord; looseness of style; looseness of morals or of principles
Some etymologies, pronunciations, function and usage date content for the English translation portion are from Merriam-Webster Online at www.Merriam-Webster.com. Thanks to Online Yunanca Dil Eğitimi for providing some parts of online greek dictionary. To contribute more resources please contact us. Visuals(images) are provided by Google Image Search API. Some parts of the dictionary is contributed by many users, thank you! The content on this site is for informational purposes only. Bu aramada loose kelimesinin sözlük anlamı ve eşanlamı nedir, nasıl okunur hakkında bilgi verilmektedir. loose kelimesinin etimolojik ve eşanlamları ile ilgili açıklamalar ve bilgiler eksiksiz ve hatasız olarak anılmamalıdır. Burada yer alan loose kelimesi ile ilgili tüm açıklamalar bilgi amaçlıdır. Eksik ve hatalı çevirileri lütfen bildiriniz.