On Words Admitting of Being Grouped Around the Root Flap Or Flak
On Words Admitting of Being Grouped Around the Root Flap Or Flak
Hensleigh Wedgwood
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laxus (z=ilak-s-us). It. Iosco, Gael, leasg, W. llesg, slack, faint, sluggish ; G. leschen, to put out, to slake, slacken the force of ; Prov. liisc, lasch, Fr. Idche, loose ; prov. or O.-E. lash, soft, loose, as a soft egg, slack, dull ; lask^ looseness of the bowels ; liisk, a lazy fellow ; to lusk, to slug ; W. llaes, loose, slack, trailing ; llaesu, to hang down, ^g> grow faint and lank ; llaes-glusU a long hanging ear ; Gael. lasach, loose ; Icel. las, los, solutio, debilitatio ; lasinn, t...ired, weak, ragged; Dan. las, a tatter; Bav. lass, lassig, slack, unstretched, slow ; It. lasso, Fr. las, weary. Corresponding to the Fr. and It. forms Idche and lasco are the verbs Idcher, to loose, slacken, release, and lasciare, properly to let loose, to leave freedom to the action of another, then to permit, to desert, while from the Teutonic modification lass are derived Fr. laisser, to let loose, to permit. It. lassare, to fatigue, and also to leave, to permit. In like manner it would seem that the Lat.
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