slaken
English
Verb
slaken
- Obsolete spelling of slacken.
- 1914, Charles Warren Stoddard, Over the Rocky Mountains to Alaska[1]:
- I was glad when we were very politely invited to get out of the train and walk a plank over a puddle that for a moment submerged the track; glad when we were advised to foot it over a trestle-bridge that sagged in the swift current of a swollen stream; and gladder still when our locomotive began to puff and blow and slaken its pace as we climbed up into the mouth of a ravine fragrant with the warm scents of summer--albeit we could boast but a solitary brace of cars, and these small ones, and not overcrowded at that.
- 1901, Charles Kingsley, Two Years Ago, Volume I[2]:
- And so she swept in, with her arm round Lucia's waist; while Elsley stood looking after her, well enough satisfied with her reception of him, and only hoping that the stream of words would slaken after a while. "
Anagrams
Dutch
Pronunciation
Audio: (file) - Hyphenation: sla‧ken
Verb
slaken