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lapsing

/laps/US // læps //UK // (læps) //

退步,退役,退保,退步的时候

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : an accidental or temporary decline or deviation from an expected or accepted condition or state; a temporary falling or slipping from a previous standard: a lapse of justice.
    • : a slip or error, often of a trivial sort; failure: a lapse of memory.
    • : an interval or passage of time; elapsed period: a lapse of ten minutes before the program resumed.
    • : a moral fall, as from rectitude or virtue.
    • : a fall or decline to a lower grade, condition, or degree; descent; regression: a lapse into savagery.
    • : the act of falling, slipping, sliding, etc., slowly or by degrees.
    • : a falling into disuse.
    • : Insurance. discontinuance of coverage resulting from nonpayment of a premium; termination of a policy.
    • : Law. the termination of a right or privilege through neglect to exercise it or through failure of some contingency.
    • : Meteorology. lapse rate.
    • : Archaic. a gentle, downward flow, as of water.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    lapsed, laps·ing.

    • : to fall or deviate from a previous standard; fail to maintain a normative level: Toward the end of the book the author lapsed into bad prose.
    • : to come to an end; stop: We let our subscription to that magazine lapse.
    • : to fall, slip, or sink; subside: to lapse into silence.
    • : to fall into disuse: The custom lapsed after a period of time.
    • : to deviate or abandon principles, beliefs, etc.: to lapse into heresy.
    • : to fall spiritually, as an apostate: to lapse from grace.
    • : to pass away, as time; elapse.
    • : Law. to become void, as a legacy to someone who dies before the testator.
    • : to cease being in force; terminate: Your insurance policy will lapse after 30 days.

Synonyms & Antonyms

verbbecome void; fall back into previous pattern

Examples

  • The defensive lapses came because of missed assignments and some trouble in transition.

  • According to sources who heard the presentation, Wyler used no names and only titles in discussing the management lapses in editing “The Mad, Mad World of Niche Sports.”

  • Despite his decision to delay signing the bill over last-minute objections, the Labor Department said this week that it does not expect people claiming certain federal unemployment benefits to experience a lapse in payments.

  • Only through lawsuits — and people like being willing to come forward — can the public get a true picture of these lapses in care.

  • Budget experts said the impact of that lapse would almost certainly be minimal if Congress can approve the government funding deal by the end of the weekend.

  • I shut my eyes yet felt aware of the garden at my elbow, the blooms opening as if in time-lapse, the stalks lengthening.

  • That lapse was partly mitigated by the rise of blog­ging, which encouraged user-generated content.

  • This trend will only accelerate as whites lapse at higher rates than nonwhites.

  • Today no one in either party would accept such a benign explanation for a lapse in security, nor should they.

  • Rich defendant, revolving door attorneys, last-minute plea deals… cue the brooding theme music and time-lapse photography.

  • This unreasoning, feminine obstinacy so wrought upon him that he permitted himself a smile and a lapse into irony and banter.

  • No notice being taken of the taps, the unseen visitor, after a short lapse, ventured to open the door and peep in.

  • He felt vexed with himself for his lapse from good manners, yet hardly able to account for it.

  • That has been left for us to discover, and that glamour in which we see their age is one afforded only by the lapse of time.

  • In the intervals which must occur between the courses, do not appear to be conscious of the lapse of time.