| loose |
not tight or confined, as in: Someone left the gate open and my dog got loose.
Ãâó: www.business-words.com/dictionary/L.html
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|---|---|
| loosening |
Decreasing soil bulk density and increasing porosity due to the application of mechanical forces to the soil via tillage.
Ãâó: www.soils.org/sssagloss/cgi-bin/gloss_search.cgi
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| loose |
Slang: freewheeling; unfettered; tending to overbid or to bid dangerously.
Ãâó: www.bridgeguys.com/LGlossary/GlossL.html
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| loose |
When a book has been read carelessly or too often, and has become loose and sloppy in its binding.
Ãâó: www.ioba.org/terms.html
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| loose |
a slang term for oversteer, the handling condition when a vehicle exhibits a tendency to lose traction initially at the rear wheels, when the slip angles of the rear tires are greater than the slip angles of the front tires. The opposite of push.
Ãâó: www.autocenter.com/about/
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| loose | not restrained or confined or attached |
|---|---|
| loose | freely producing mucus |
| loose | not tight |
| loose | not officially recognized or controlled |
| loose | not carefully arranged in a package |
| loose | lacking a sense of restraint or responsibility |
| loose | not fixed firmly or tightly |
| loose | (of textures) full of small openings or gaps |
| loose | not tense or taut |
| loose | without restraint |
| loose | a person who is expected to perform a particular task but who is out of control and dangerous |
| loose | work that is left incomplete |
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